logo
Bugti strikes a chord with Sabri qawwals

Bugti strikes a chord with Sabri qawwals

Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfraz Bugti has won praise from the Sabri qawwal troupe, survivors of last month's terrorist attack in Khuzdar, after announcing Rs6 million financial assistance for the families of the deceased devotional performers and extending official recognition to the ensemble.
To mark Independence Day, CM Bugti arranged his personal aircraft from Karachi to fly the qawwals to Balochistan, where they were received as guests of honour. At the ceremony, the performers were welcomed warmly and invited on stage. Condolences were offered over the tragedy and a pledge was made to bring the perpetrators to justice.
Lead qawwal Majid Ali Sabri said the reception was unforgettable. "When the plane landed on Balochistan's soil, the welcome brought tears to our eyes. The hospitality and respect extended to us was priceless," he told The Express Tribune.
Among the survivors is tabla player Shahbaz Ali, who lost three fingers of his right hand and suffered paralysis in his left. He has since been shifted to Karachi for treatment.
The attack occurred on July 16 when the Sabri troupe departed PIB Colony for a performance in Quetta. After stopping near Khuzdar for lunch and fuel, their bus came under attack from heavily armed terrorists, who opened fire and hurled grenades. Three members of the ensemble were killed on the spot, while over a dozen others were wounded.
Sabri said Bugti was the first to provide tangible support. "This was not just financial aid but also a gesture of respect for artistes and a rare expression of love from one province to another," he remarked.
He, however, criticised Sindh Governor Kamran Tessori for what he termed indifference. "He visited our home and attended the funerals, but later there was no support. I went to the Governor House three times but was stopped at the gate. Even when I managed to meet him, there was no outcome," he added.
Appealing to Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, Sabri urged the federal government to take notice. "Many of us have lost loved ones, others have been left permanently disabled. We request the prime minister to send a fact-finding team and announce proper assistance. Most of us are daily-wage performers who live hand-to-mouth," he added.
Officials said two injured troupe members were recently shifted from Quetta to Karachi for treatment, while two others remain under treatment in Balochistan and will be transferred soon.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rs15.6m looted from Korean seafood staff
Rs15.6m looted from Korean seafood staff

Express Tribune

time35 minutes ago

  • Express Tribune

Rs15.6m looted from Korean seafood staff

The robbers, who spent over four hours in the house, looted Rs510,000 in cash and four mobile phones. PHOTO: REUTERS Six unidentified armed robbers, riding two motorcycles, looted Rs15.6 million cash from a Korean seafood export company staff and fled. The robbers also snatched the weapon from a security guard, accompanying the staff. The incident took place near the Keamari Fish Harbour. SSP Kemari, Captain (retd) Faizan Ali, informed The Express Tribune that as per the preliminary investigation the local staff of the Korean company had withdrawn Rs15.6 million from a bank near the harbour. As their vehicle reached close to their company's gate, six armed men on two motorcycles intercepted them and snatched the cash bag at gunpoint. The SSP added that a security guard was accompanying the company staff, but he did not took any action during the robbery. In fact, the robbers also snatched his weapon and fled the scene. The SSP stated that the police have obtained CCTV footage of the robbery and have also collected other evidence. The security guard and the company's accountant have been detained for questioning. SHO Docks, Nand Lal, said that as per the company's statement, the looted cash was intended to be distributed among employees as bonuses.

Independence - dreams deferred?
Independence - dreams deferred?

Express Tribune

timean hour ago

  • Express Tribune

Independence - dreams deferred?

The writer is a former Secretary to Government, Home and Tribal Affairs Department and a retired IGP. He can be reached at syed_shah94@ Independence Day on 14th August passed amidst jubilation, military parades, patriotic songs and dazzling illuminations. Seventy-eight years on, we continue to mark this day with great fervour. The very word independence evokes a sense of fresh breathing, of casting off the shackles that once bound us. All nations take pride in their independence, for it is supposed to signify dignity, self-determination and collective ownership of destiny. But have we ever paused to ask ourselves: Why did we seek independence? What does it truly mean in the life of a nation? Before 14 August 1947, we had our mosques, offered our prayers and revered our shrines, many of which were - and still are - in India. Millions of Muslims continue to live there today. Our inheritance, marriages and other personal matters were governed under Muslim personal law. Then why was there such a powerful demand for a separate homeland? The leaders of the Pakistan Movement argued that in a Hindu-majority India, Muslims would be politically marginalised and economically disadvantaged. Their voices would be drowned, their talents stifled. They feared that without political autonomy, Muslims would remain underdogs - destined for poverty, exploitation and denial of fundamental rights. The dream was of emancipation from the yoke of subjugation - of a state where the rights of all citizens would be safeguarded, where justice would prevail, and where every individual could flourish regardless of creed, caste or class. Yet, as we look around today, the picture is starkly different from what was envisioned. Extreme poverty engulfs nearly half of our population. The Pakistan Bureau of Statistics and independent economic surveys repeatedly warn of widening inequality. Millions of children remain out of school; malnutrition and stunted growth plague our future generations; the doctor-to-patient ratio remains critically low; and basic health facilities are beyond the reach of the common man. Fundamental rights enshrined in the Constitution - freedom of speech, assembly, movement and association - are often curtailed in practice. Political freedoms have been repeatedly subjected to arbitrary restrictions, and dissent is often treated not as a democratic necessity but as a threat to state security. The constitutional journey, too, has been tumultuous. The 1973 Constitution, envisaged as a consensual social contract, has been subjected to repeated suspensions, abrogations and distortions. Rather than serving as the supreme law binding all institutions to democratic norms, it has too often been bent to serve the expediencies of those in power. The 26th Amendment and other constitutional manoeuvres have often reflected power struggles rather than principled reform. The spirit of constitutionalism - the guarantee that no one is above the law - remains fragile. What is even more troubling is the misuse of laws meant for national security. The Anti-Terrorism Act, enacted in the 1990s to combat genuine threats to public safety, has been weaponised against political leaders and parties. Peaceful protests, sit-ins and rallies - hallmarks of a functioning democracy - are painted with the same brush as acts of terrorism. Such practices not only undermine democracy but also corrode public trust in state institutions. Due process of law, a cornerstone of justice, is often ignored. Political opponents are detained without fair trial; investigations become tools of harassment; and the presumption of innocence - a basic principle of law - is eroded. In several recent instances, prolonged detention without conviction has become the norm, effectively punishing individuals before any court has declared them guilty. This is not merely a political problem - it is a deep constitutional wound. In his haunting poem Subh-e-Azadi, written in the aftermath of Partition, Faiz Ahmad Faiz captured the disillusionment of a people who had gained political freedom but not the promised social and economic justice: "This stained light, this night-bitten dawn This is not the dawn we longed for; This is not the dawn for which we set out Hoping to find, somewhere in the desert of the sky, The final destination of the stars' night." Faiz's lament was not a rejection of freedom itself, but a painful recognition that the journey towards true independence - independence from hunger, fear, exploitation and injustice - was far from over. Sadly, his words still resonate today. True independence is not merely the absence of foreign rule; it is the presence of justice, equality and opportunity. It is a system where the weak can challenge the strong and still win, where the law protects without prejudice, and where the state serves its citizens rather than ruling over them. It is a social contract binding rulers to act as trustees of the people's welfare. Seventy-eight years on, we must ask ourselves: Have we honoured that contract? Have we upheld the ideals for which sacrifices were made, lives were lost and dreams were kindled? Or have we replaced one form of subjugation with another - swapping foreign masters for domestic elites who treat the state as their personal estate? Our economic woes, human rights violations and governance failures are not inevitable. They are the product of choices - choices to prioritise short-term political gains over long-term institutional reform; to silence dissent instead of engaging it; to centralise power rather than distribute it. If we continue to drift away from constitutional governance, allow poverty to deepen and permit the erosion of rights, then the celebrations each August will ring hollow. The parades, the songs and the fireworks will be but a veneer over a deeper national unease. Independence will remain an unfulfilled promise - an anthem sung without meaning, a flag raised without purpose. The dream of Pakistan was never simply about a piece of land; it was about creating a society grounded in dignity, justice and equality. Until we realise that vision, Faiz's "night-bitten dawn" will continue to haunt our mornings.

Suicide attack foiled in Balochistan, suspect arrested: CM Bugti
Suicide attack foiled in Balochistan, suspect arrested: CM Bugti

Business Recorder

time10 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

Suicide attack foiled in Balochistan, suspect arrested: CM Bugti

Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfraz Bugti on Monday said the security forces foiled a major terrorist attack on Independence Day and arrested a 'would-be' suicide bomber, terming it a breakthrough against insurgents in the province. Addressing a press conference alongside top officials, Bugti said the suspect, Dr Mohammad Usman Kazi, a Grade-18 university lecturer, had planned to target citizens on Aug 14. He was also allegedly involved in facilitating the November 2024 Quetta Railway Station bombing, which killed 32 people and injured more than 50. Bugti said the suspect belonged to the banned Balochistan Liberation Army's (BLA) Majeed Brigade, which operates in multiple tiers and has intensified its attacks on security forces. 'This is the first time security forces have arrested a leader from the 'sophisticated' tier of the group,' he noted. He said the arrest prevented 'huge destruction' and praised the Counter-Terrorism Department and police for their role in the operation. A recorded statement of the suspect was aired at the briefing, in which he confirmed his academic and professional background, as well as his government-employed family members. Rejecting the narrative that militancy is driven by deprivation, Bugti argued that the suspect and his family were well-educated and financially stable, with government jobs and scholarships. 'This concocted narrative is used to legitimise the fight against Pakistan,' he remarked. The chief minister warned that those who shield militants would face strict action. He recalled that neighbours of a 'to-be suicide bomber' connected with Kazi resisted police during a raid, adding that all of them had since been arrested. Bugti also highlighted broader counterterrorism measures, saying the provincial government had investigated over 2,000 people, including government employees, under the Fourth Schedule. Some were cleared, while others were suspended or terminated. 'We will not spare anyone. We'll fight this war in both warfare and lawfare,' he said. Balochistan has seen a surge in militant violence in recent months, with groups like the BLA adopting new tactics to inflict higher casualties and directly target security forces.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store