After the slaughtering of 11 coal miners of the Hazara community in the Mach area of Balochistan last Sunday, Prime Minister Imran Khan's refusal to meet the bereaved families of the victims sparked controversy.
Background information from the Prime Minister's aides has revealed that he wanted to rush to Quetta soon after the incident, but was advised to wait until the situation normalised.
He further stated that government was making all out efforts to arrest the culprits behind the killing of coalmine workers of Much area of Balochistan.
Tahir Mahmood Ashrafi, Special Advisor to the Prime Minister on Religious Harmony and the Middle East, has mentioned that Pakistan is establishing interfaith harmony councils at the local, provincial and national level.
Pakistan is currently in the midst of heightened protests, over the killing of 11 miners from the minority Shia Hazara community in Southwestern Balochistan, on Sunday.
As a result of widespread protests, city life has been badly affected while traffic gridlocks were witnessed on major thoroughfares
The sit-ins are likely to continue until the main protest being staged by members of the Hazara community on Quetta’s Western Bypass near Hazara Town ends
Kamal said practical measures are being taken to improve the security situation across the province in order to ensure the protection of public lives and their property.
Imran says he want to reassure the Hazara families who lost their loved ones in a brutal terrorist attack in Machh that he is cognizant of their suffering & their demands
India is instigating sectarian terrorism in the country: PM