Remembering the Ojhri Camp Blast

Posted on April 10, 2009
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Disasters, History
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Adil Najam

Today is April 10.

Nineteen years ago, today, on April 10, 1988 the military ammunition depot at Ojhri Camp, Rawlapindi, blew up and unleashed an inferno that sent all sorts of rockets all over Rawalpindi and into neighboring Islamabad. It also let to a sequence of events that led to the ouster of then Prime Minister Mohammed Khan Junejo and, depending on which conspiracy theorist you believe, to the death of then President General Mohammad Zia ul Haq.

Reader Dilnawaz of Bradistan Calling forwarded me an article by Tariq Mehmood on the Ojhri blast. Some excerpts worth reproducing:

21 years ago, on the 10th April 1988 Ojhrii dump in Rawalpindi was blown up. This was a deliberate act of destruction. Hundreds upon hundreds of missiles rained down on Rawalpindi and Islamabad. Over 5000 people were killed. Many, many thousands more were injured.

I was working as a journalist for the Frontier Post and along with a colleague, Imran Munir, went into the camp, early the day after the explosion. Every now and again, a rocket or missile would take off, and land somewhere, causing yet more deaths and destruction.

All manner of rockets and shells were going off. People were sitting around shell shocked. The houses close to Ojhri were reduced to mere shells. I went into one house. A man in his late 20s was sitting amidst shattered glass and broken wood. He was rubbing his hands in the glass. Blood fr om his shredded hands was spreading across the floor. He had a little child’s shoe. He turned to us. I looked into his bloodshot eyes. He said, “this is where my son was martyred.” Imran was about to take a photograph of him, but he lowered the camera. We could not snap him in this position. We stood there for a while, we wanted to lift him up but the man wanted to stay with the memory of his child. Out side his door I saw a dog. It stood in front of us. It was a healthy black and white mongrel. It must once have been a loved pet. I can still see the dogs eyes, filled with unspeakable terror, asking me why? Why? Why? I did not know what to say to the creature. I did not know what had happened. Had I known, I would have sat down and told the dog, that this is the way those that rule, hide one crime by committing another.

Some people I talked to said they saw a missile cut through a buffalo’s stomach. I have found some of my notes from that time. Many people said that the police just ran off, even from major traffic junctions and students took over the posts, directing traffic.

… Some people at the time said they thought the day of judgement had arrived. I have found three eye witness accounts from that time. I only have their names and do not remember much more of them.

“I was going towards Faizabad when I heard the explosion. There was a huge fire. Many people were running towards it, while the police were running away from it. Missiles started flying in every direction. I saw about 12 young men sheltering under a tree. Then they were all dead. The road going towards the CDA (Capital Development Authority) colony was littered with hands and feet of little children. Such great injustice. The world seemed to have died. Whilst the police ran off, students started directing traffic.” Bagh Hussain.

“It was raining missiles and bombs. Everyone was running for their lives. The area was full of explosions and screaming. What the bombs did not destroy the police took.” Mohammad Ishaque.

“Four thousand have died. It was like Qiamat. Even when all hell was let loose, when bombs were spread around liked chopped pieces of wood, these people (pointing to policemen) were robbing – such injustice.”

I, too, was in Islamabad at the time and have vivid memories of the incident and its aftermath. I was driving in front of the Jinnah Super market in F-7 when panic started hitting Islamabad and cars started rushing every which way. I also turned back and rushed home. This was before the advent of the internet or he 24 hour news channels in Pakistan, so rumors ran amuck.

“It was a terrorist attack,” said some. “No,” said others, “its India, can’t you see the direction that the sound is coming from!” Others would chime in, “No, no, no. Its merely one more blast like the ones we are having every day.” Yet others saw ‘saahoni sazishian’ and ‘umreekan haath’ in all of this. And so it went on and on. The phone kept ringing. A friend who had a shell just land outside his gate. A relative, whose car was hit by another car which in turn had been hit by flying sharpnel.

By the end of the day clarity began to emerge. But not really.

It was clear, now, that it was Ojhri. That it was an ammunition dump. Everyone knew that this was related to the Afghanistan operation and ISI controlled the location. Soon, the politics also began becoming clear and before long Mohammed Khan Junejo was booted out. But that was the extent of it. Theories abound, but it remains unclear exactly what happened? Who did what? How? Why?

One would have thought that more would have come out on something this important and of this magnitude. It really has not. One must wonder, why?

P.S. In preparing this post I was also struck by how little there is on this over the internet. Especially in terms of photographic record. It may be because this was a pre-digital camera event. If any one has access or links to photographs of the outfall, please do share.

P.P.S. This is a repost of an original post published at ATP on this date in 2007.

58 responses to “Remembering the Ojhri Camp Blast”

  1. blue and grey says:

    Harris, I am sorry about your pain from that day and everybody’s pain from that day. Your post made me calculate again since it was my first day of seventh too. Conclusion: I was 11 years old nearing 12.

  2. Harris says:

    I was in 7th grade at the time and my school was very close to Ojari camp. I still remember that we had barely settled in our new class (academic year used to run from April to March) in those days. The first explosion was by far the biggest and I will not forget that blinding flash for as long as I live. The whole room shook and my friend fell off his chair.

    We thought it was a bomb blast but after a few minutes there was another blast. Not quite as loud as the first but still earth shattering. After that The missiles started to fly. Our school administrators got us out in the field and looking in the general direction of Ojari camp we could see missiles taking off and flying in all directions. It was a middle school so in 7th grade we were considered seniors. Our job was to calm the little kids but to be honest with you my legs were shaking.

    I saw dozens of missiles flying above our school. Two of them landed right in front of the gate, one less than 6 feet away that embedded itself deep into the ground. The shaking of the ground, the blasts and the whizzing sound of a high speed missile piercing the air was something can never be forgotten by those who were there.

    After about 20 minutes a large mushroom cloud started to appear over the site giving rise to the speculation that it was a nuclear attack from Russia, some suggested that India had attacked us (We were 11 year old kids with wild imaginations).

    On my way back from school what I saw on the way is better left untold. Those are images I tried hard to erase from my memory.

    There was no light in Rawalpindi for at least a couple of days after the incident and no phone connection. My mother had left for Lahore the same morning and got the news when she stopped in Kharian. People told her that entire cities of Rawalpindi and Islamabad had been destroyed . It is hard to feel the pain she must have felt knowing nothing about her three children and no way to contact them or even get back since the traffic at Attock and Rawat was blocked to anyone entering the city.

    For the next few days we regularly heard of what had happened to the homes of our friends and family and everyone had a story to tell of the great escapes. The sound of blasts coming from Barakahu kept us reminding of that day when Army destroyed the rockets they had collected from both cities.

  3. Adnan Siddiqi says:


    I have always wondered, why we don’t know anything about what happened. I mean there was an enquiry back then… Why weren’t the results made public?

    Very simple. The incident happened when a military dictator was ruling. A country where army is considered a sacred cow, you can’t expect any honest outcome about the corruption of Army. Speaking of Army, Asma of ISB-MB just forwarded the following link:

    http://www.fascistarmy.org/index.htm

  4. blue and grey says:

    BTW, thanks for writing about this. I am glad someone brought it up.

  5. blue and grey says:

    Vivid memories for me too! I was 13 year old and at school at that time. Actualy, it was the first day of the new school year. After the first one or two blasts most of us thought that it was yet another blast in one of the nearby markets, Jinnah Super, or Super Market. But this impression lasted only a few seconds, soon other explosions followed and we stopped counting.

    They evacuated the building and made us stand in the ground behind the school building, away from where the smoke plume now appeared clearly. I remember a lot of children from the primary sections crying, teachers taking care of them, but so worried themselves. I don’t know how much time we stood there. It is strange, I vividly remember the first few explosions. But I don’t remember the sound of the explosions afterwards. Probably, because it was there constantly. II remember clearly the sound of shells flying not far away from where we were. Later my mother came and took us home.

    When we saw the news later, we understood how lucky we had been; so many had lost so much.

    Like you Adil, I have always wondered, why we don’t know anything about what happened. I mean there was an enquiry back then… Why weren’t the results made public? What about now? It’s been 19 years and they are still not known…
    I have a hard time believing that nobody knows what happened. And to me personally, it seems like an added trauma: not knowing WHY people died.

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