Tuesday, 8 March 2016

Benazir Bhutto

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Benazir Bhutto
بينظير ڀٽو
بينظير بھٹو
Benazir Bhutto.jpg
11th Prime Minister of Pakistan
In office
19 October 1993 – 5 November 1996
PresidentWasim Sajjad
Farooq Leghari
Preceded byMoeenuddin Ahmad Qureshi(Acting)
Succeeded byMalik Meraj Khalid (Acting)
In office
2 December 1988 – 6 August 1990
PresidentGhulam Ishaq Khan
Preceded byMuhammad Khan Junejo
Succeeded byGhulam Mustafa Jatoi (Acting)
Leader of the Opposition
In office
17 February 1997 – 12 October 1999
Preceded byNawaz Sharif
Succeeded byFazal-ur-Rehman
In office
6 November 1990 – 18 April 1993
Preceded byKhan Abdul Wali Khan
Succeeded byNawaz Sharif
Chairperson of the Pakistan Peoples Party
In office
12 November 1982 – 27 December 2007
Acting: 12 November 1982 – 10 January 1984
Preceded byNusrat Bhutto
Succeeded byAsif Ali Zardari
Bilawal Bhutto Zardari
Personal details
Born21 June 1953
KarachiSindPakistan
(now in Sindh, Pakistan)
Died27 December 2007 (aged 54)
RawalpindiPunjabPakistan
Resting placeGarhi Khuda BakhshSindh,Pakistan
Spouse(s)Asif Ali Zardari (1987–2007)
RelationsBhutto family
Zardari family
ChildrenBilawal
Bakhtawar
Asifa
ParentsZulfiqar Ali Bhutto (father)
Nusrat Bhutto (mother)
Alma materHarvard University
Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford
St Catherine's College, Oxford
ReligionIslam
Signature
Benazir Bhutto (Sindhiبينظير ڀٽو‎; Urduبينظير بھٹو‎; June 21, 1953 – December 27, 2007) was the 11th Prime Minister of Pakistan, serving two non-consecutive terms in 1988–90 and then 1993–96. A scion of the politically powerful Bhutto family, she was the eldest daughter of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, a former prime minister himself who founded the centre-left Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP). She was the first woman to become head of government of any Muslim nation.[1]
In 1982, three years after her father's execution, 29-year-old Benazir Bhutto became the chairperson of the PPP—a political party, making her the first woman in Pakistan to head a major political party. In 1988, she became the first woman to be elected as the head of an Islamic state's government; she also remains Pakistan's only female prime minister. Noted for her charismatic authority[2] and political astuteness, Bhutto drove initiatives for Pakistan's economy and national security, and she implemented capitalist policies for industrial development and growth. In addition, her political philosophy and economic policies emphasised deregulation (particularly of the financial sector), flexible labour markets, the denationalisation of state-owned corporations, and the withdrawal of subsidies to others. Bhutto's popularity waned amid recession, corruption, and high unemployment which later led to the dismissal of her government by conservative President Ghulam Ishaq Khan.
In 1993, Bhutto was elected for a second term after the 1993 parliamentary elections. She survived an attempted coup d'état in 1995, and her hard line against the trade unions and tough rhetorical opposition to her domestic political rivals and to neighbouring India earned her the nickname "Iron Lady";[3] she was also respectfully referred to as "BB". In 1996, charges of corruption levelled against her led to the final dismissal of her government by President Farooq Leghari. Bhutto conceded her defeat in the 1997 Parliamentary elections and went into exile in Dubai in 1999. Nine years later, in 2007, she returned to Pakistan, having reached an understanding with President Pervez Musharraf, who granted her amnesty and withdrew all corruption charges against her. Bhutto was assassinated in a bombing on 27 December 2007, after leaving PPP's last rally in Rawalpindi, two weeks before the scheduled 2008 general election in which she was the leading candidate. Her party subsequently won the elections on a wave of sympathy generated by her assassination.

Early life, 1953–77[edit]

See also: Bhutto family
See also: Zardari family
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Benazir's father, was Prime Minister of Pakistan and founding chairman of the PPP.
Benazir Bhutto was born at Karachi's Pinto Hospital on 21 June 1953.[4] She was the eldest child of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, of Sindhi Rajput ethnicity,[5][6][7] and Begum Nusrat Ispahani, of Iranian Kurdish descent.[8][9][10] She had three younger siblings—MurtazaShahnawaz andSanam. According to Benazir her mother's Kurdish culture played a big role in her becoming the Prime Minister.[8]
Bhutto was raised to speak both English and Urdu, the former being her first language. While she was fluent in Urdu, it was often colloquial rather than formal. In her autobiography 'Daughter of the East', Bhutto also makes reference to her use of the Sindhi language, joking about her misunderstanding of the "Mohenjo-daro". According to various interviews given by former servants of her household, she and her father would speak to them in their native Sindhi.
She attended the Lady Jennings Nursery School and Convent of Jesus and Mary in Karachi.[11] After two years at the Rawalpindi Presentation Convent, she was sent to the Jesus and Mary Convent at Murree. She passed her O-level examinations aged 15.[12] She then went on to complete her A-Levels at the Karachi Grammar School.
After completing her early education in Pakistan, she pursued her higher education in the United States. From 1969 to 1973 she attended Radcliffe College at Harvard University, where she obtained a BA with cum laude honours in comparative government.[13] She was also elected to Phi Beta Kappa.[12] Bhutto later called her time at Harvard "four of the happiest years of my life" and said it formed "the very basis of her belief in democracy". Later in 1995 as Prime Minister, she arranged a gift from the Pakistani government to Harvard Law School.[14]
The next phase of her education happened in Britain. Between 1973 and 1977 Bhutto studied Philosophy, Politics, and Economics at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, where she took additional courses in International Law and Diplomacy.[15] After LMH she attended St Catherine's College, Oxford[16] and in December 1976 she was elected president of the Oxford Union, becoming the first Asian woman to head the prestigious debating society.[12] Her undergraduate career was dogged by controversy, partly relating to her father's unpopularity with student politicians.[17] She was also President of the Oxford Majlis Asian Society.[18]
On 18 December 1987, she married Asif Ali Zardari in Karachi. The couple had three children: two daughters, Bakhtawarand Asifa, and a son, Bilawal. When she gave birth to Bakhtawar in 1990, she became the first modern head of government to give birth while in office.[19]

Asif Ali Zardari

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Asif Ali Zardari
آصف علی زرداری
Asif Ali Zardari - 2009.jpg
11th President of Pakistan
In office
9 September 2008 – 8 September 2013
Prime MinisterYousaf Raza Gillani
Raja Pervaiz Ashraf
Mir Hazar Khan Khoso (Acting)
Nawaz Sharif
Preceded byMuhammad Mian Soomro(Acting)
Succeeded byMamnoon Hussain
President of the Pakistan People's Party Parliamentarians[1]
Assumed office
27 December 2015
Preceded byAmeen Faheem
Co-chairperson of the Pakistan People's Party
In office
30 December 2007 – 27 December 2015
Serving with Bilawal Bhutto Zardari
Preceded byPosition established
Personal details
Born26 July 1955 (age 60)
KarachiSindPakistan
(now in Sindh, Pakistan)
Political partyPakistan Peoples Party
Spouse(s)Benazir Bhutto (1987–2007)
ChildrenBilawal
Bakhtawar
Asifa
ReligionIslam[2]
Asif Ali Zardari (Urduآصف علی زرداری‎) Sindhiآصف علي زرداري‎); born 26 July 1955)[3] is a Pakistani politician and current co-chairperson of Pakistan People's Party. He served as the 11th President of Pakistan from 2008 to 2013.
landowner from Sindh, Zardari rose to prominence after his marriage toBenazir Bhutto in 1987, becoming the First Gentleman after his wife was elected Prime Minister in 1988. When Bhutto's government was dismissed by President Ghulam Ishaq Khan in 1990, Zardari was widely criticized forinvolvement in corruption scandals that led to its collapse.[4][5] When Bhutto was reelected in 1993, Zardari served as Federal Investment Minister and Chairperson Pakistan Environmental Protection Council in her second administration. Following increasing tensions between Bhutto's brotherMurtaza and Zardari, Murtaza was killed in a police encounter in Karachi on 20 September 1996.[6][7] Bhutto's government was dismissed a month later by President Farooq Leghari, while Zardari was arrested and indicted for Murtaza's murder as well as corruption charges.[8][9]
Although incarcerated, he nominally served in Parliament after being elected to the National Assembly in 1990 and Senate in 1997. He was released from jail in 2004 and went into self-exile to Dubai, but returned when Bhutto was assassinated on 27 December 2007. As the new Co-Chairman of the PPP, he led his party to victory in the 2008 general elections. He spearheaded a coalition that forced military ruler Pervez Musharraf to resign, and was elected President on 6 September 2008. He was acquitted of various criminal charges the same year.[10][11]
As president, Zardari remained a strong U.S. ally in the war in Afghanistan, despite prevalent public disapproval of the United States following theRaymond Davis incident and the Nato attack in Salala in 2011. Domestically, Zardari achieved the passage of the Eighteenth Amendment in 2010, which constitutionally reduced his presidential powers. His attempt to prevent the reinstatement of Supreme Court judges failed in the face of massive protestsled by his political rival Nawaz Sharif. The restored Supreme Court dismissed the PPP's elected Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani for contempt in 2012, after Gillani refused to write to the Government of Switzerland to reopen corruption cases against Zardari. Zardari's tenure was also criticized for mishandling nationwide floods in 2010, and growing terrorist violence. Following multiple bombings of Hazaras in Quetta in early 2013, Zardari dismissed his provincial government in Balochistan.
Towards the end of his term, Zardari recorded abysmally low approval ratings, ranging from 11 to 14%.[12][13] After the PPP was heavily defeated in the 2013 general election, Zardari became the country's first elected president to complete his constitutional term on 8 September 2013.[14] The Zardari-led PPP continues to form the provincial government in Sindh.

Early life and education

Zardari was born on 26 July 1955[15] in KarachiSindh[16][17] in the Zardari family. He is a Sindhi of Baloch origin, belonging to the Sindhi-Baloch Zardari tribe.[15] He is the only son of Hakim Ali Zardari, a tribal chief and prominent landowner, and Zarrin Zardari.[16][18]
In his youth, he enjoyed polo and boxing.[19] He led a polo team known as the Zardari Four.[20] His father owned Bambino[21]—a famous cinema in Karachi—and donated movie equipment to his school.[19] He also appeared in a movie, Salgirah, as a child artist.[22] Zardari's academic background remains a question mark.[19] He received his primary education fromKarachi Grammar School. His official biography says he graduated from Cadet College, Petaro in 1972.[15][19] He went to St Patrick's High School, Karachi from 1973–74; a school clerk says he failed his final examination there.[19] In March 2008, he claimed he had graduated from the London School of Business Studies with a bachelor of education degree in the early 1970s.[21] Zardari's official biography states he also attended Pedinton School in Britain.[19][21][23] His British education, however, has not been confirmed, and a search did not turn up any Pedinton School in London.[19][21][23] The issue of his diploma was contentious because a 2002 rule required candidates for Parliament to hold a college degree,[21] but the rule was overturned by Pakistan's Supreme Court in April 2008.[19][23]

Early political career

Zardari's initial political career was unsuccessful. In 1983, he lost an election for a district council seat in Nawabshah, a city of Sindh, where his family owned thousands of acres of farmland.[19] He then went into real estate.[19]

Benazir Bhutto era

Marriage to Bhutto

He married Benazir Bhutto on 18 December 1987.[24][25] The arranged marriage, done in accordance with Pakistani culture, was initially considered an unlikely match.[24][25] The lavish sunset ceremony in Karachi was followed by immense night celebrations that included over 100,000 people.[24][25] The marriage enhanced Bhutto's political position in a country where older unmarried women are frowned upon.[24][25] Zardari deferred to his wife's wishes by agreeing to stay out of politics.[25]
In 1988, General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq died in a plane crash. A few months later, Bhutto became Pakistan's first female Prime Minister when her party won 94 of 207 seats contested in the 1988 elections.

Involvement in the first Bhutto Administration and first imprisonment

Zardari, Benazir Bhutto, and baby Bilawal in a state visit to Andrews Air Force Base in 1989
He generally stayed out of his wife's first administration, but he and his associates became entangled in corruption cases linked to the government.[4] He was largely blamed for the collapse of the Bhutto administration.[5]
After the dismissal of Bhutto's government in August 1990,[26] Benazir Bhutto and Zardari were prohibited from leaving the country by security forces under the direction of the Pakistan Army.[27] During the interim government between August and October, caretaker Prime Minister Ghulam Mustafa Jatoi, a Bhutto rival, initiated investigations of corruption by the Bhutto administration.[28] Jatoi accused Zardari of using his wife's political position to charge a ten percent commission for obtaining permission to set up any project or to receive loans.[28] He was tagged with the nickname "Mr. Ten Percent".[19]
He was arrested on 10 October 1990 on charges relating to kidnapping and extortion.[26][29] The charges alleged an extortion scheme that involved tying a supposed bomb to a British businessman's leg.[19] The Bhutto family considered the indictment politically motivated and fabricated.[29] In the October 1990 elections, he was elected to the National Assembly while in jail.[30] Bhutto and the PPP staged a walkout from the inaugural session of the National Assembly to protest Zardari's incarceration.[30] He posted $20,000 bail, but his release was blocked by a government ordinance that removed a court's power to release suspects being tried in the terrorist court, which fast-track trials for alleged terrorists.[5] The ordinance was later revoked and a special court acquitted him of bank fraud and conspiracy to murder political opponents.[5] He was freed in February 1993.[5] In March 1994, Zardari was acquitted of bank fraud charges.[31] All other corruption charges relating to Bhutto's first term were dropped or thrown out of the courts.[32]
On March 25, 1991, the hijackers aboard Singapore Airlines Flight 117 demanded Zardari's release among other demands. The hijackers were killed by Singapore Commandos.

Altaf Hussain

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Altaf Hussain
الطاف حسین
Leader of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement
Assumed office
18 March 1984
Personal details
Born17 September 1953 (age 62)
Karachi, Pakistan
Nationality
Political partyMutahidda Qaumi Movement
Spouse(s)Faiza Altaf (divorced)
ChildrenAfzaa Altaf
ResidenceLondon, United Kingdom
Alma mater
OccupationPolitician, philanthropy
ReligionSufi Islam[1]
Altaf Hussain (Urduالطاف حسین‎; pronounced [əlt̪aːf ɦʊseːn]; born 17 September 1953 in Karachi) is a Pakistani politician living in exile as a naturalised citizen in the United Kingdom.[2] He is the leader and founder of the Karachi-based political party, Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), a party aimed at defending the interests of the muhajir community and the Urdu-speaking descendants of Muslims who moved from India to Pakistan after their independence from Britain in 1947.
Hussain belongs to a muhajir family that moved from Agra, Uttar Pradesh in India to settle in Pakistan following Pakistan's independence from Britain in 1947. He joined student politics by forming the All Pakistan Muhajir Students Organization (APMSO) in 1978 and later stepped into mainstream politics by founding the MQM in 1984, which is now the fourth largest political party in theNational Assembly of Pakistan. Hussain's party has had political influence in Pakistan since the 1990s by being a part of several governing coalitions.[3][4][5][6] The party's political strongholds are the urban cities of Karachi and Hyderabad in Pakistan. As of 2014, Hussain lives in Edgware in north-west London where he applied for and was granted political asylum in 1992.
Hussain's political leadership has often been seen as controversial.[7] Critics claim that his party has shown a readiness to use violence to fight for power. Several allegations of criminal activities have been piled against the MQM involving violence perpetrated by its armed wings, drug trafficking, extortion and land theft.[8] BBC News has called Hussain "one of Pakistan's longest-serving and most powerful and divisive politicians".[9] On 20 May 2013, former cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan accused Hussain of being directly involved in the murder of his party leader Zahra Shahid Hussain[7]and Hussain also faces allegations of murder of his own party leader Imran Farooq, a claim under investigation by theLondon Metropolitan Police.
Whilst under investigation by the London Metropolitan police, Hussain was also charged with money laundering and hate speech, which led to his arrest on 3 July 2013 where the police raided his house and seized approximately £1 million under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002.[10][11][12][13] Hussain was interrogated on 4 July 2013 for seven hours in connection with the aforementioned money laundering case[14] More recently, on 3 June 2014, Hussain was again arrested by the police on charges of money laundering. He was later released on bail on 6 June 2014, after he had been questioned thoroughly

Early life

Childhood and family

Altaf Hussain was born on 17 September 1953 to Nazir Hussain and Khurseed Begum in KarachiSindh. Before the formation of Pakistan, Hussain's parents resided at their ancestral home in Nai ki Mandi, Agra, Uttar Pradesh.[16] His father was an officer with the Indian Railways.[17] His paternal grandfather Mohammad Ramazan was the Grand Mufti of Agra and his maternal grandfather Pir Haji Hafiz Rahim Bakhsh Qadri was a religious scholar.[citation needed] Hussain's siblings include four sisters and six brothers.
Following the independence of Pakistan in 1947, a wide-scale migration of Muslims ensued where they migrated from the various Muslim-majority states in India to the newly established Dominion of Pakistan. Hussain's parents were initially reluctant to leave everything behind in Agra to resettle in Pakistan but were later forced by Hussain's elder brother to reconsider. Upon emigrating to Pakistan, the family settled in Karachi.[16] They were provided with government housing in Abyssinia Lines reserved for muhajirs (a term used to describe people and families migrating from India).
Hussain's elder brother Nasir Hussain was later employed by the government and given a small quarter on Jehangir Road. The family subsequently left their government allotted residence and moved in with Nasir. The family later moved residence again in the 1970s to a small house in Azizabad which later became the headquarters of Hussain's political party Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM; formerly Muhajir Qaumi Movement).[18]

Education and non-political career

Hussain received his early education from the Government Comprehensive School in Azizabad. He later enrolled in the Government Boys Secondary School to complete his matriculation in 1969. For the first year of his intermediate educationin pre-medical sciences, he attended the National College Karachi. He later moved to City College Karachi for his second year.
In 1974, Hussain graduated from the Islamia Science College with a Bachelor of Science.[19] In 1979, he graduated from the University of Karachi with a Bachelor of Pharmacy. After graduating from the university, Hussain began his career as a trainee at the Seventh-day Adventist Hospital in Karachi while simultaneously working for a multinational pharmaceutical company.[20]

Short-lived military service

In 1970, General Yahya Khan introduced the National Service Cadet Scheme (NSCS) making it compulsory for higher secondary scholars to enlist with the army. According to the MQM, Altaf Hussain enlisted with the Pakistan Army through the NSCS[20] and his services were assigned to the 57th Baloch Regiment as soldier number 2642671.[21] Upon completion of his training, his regiment was assigned from Hyderabad to Karachi from where it was sent to East Pakistan via ships.[21]
Once the 1971 Indo-Pak war came to an end, Hussain returned to West Pakistan to join wilfully with the regular army.[22] In the version of events told by the MQM, the selection officer rejected Hussain's selection because his parents were 'muhajirs' from India even when Hussain insisted he was born in Pakistan.[21] This is quoted as one of the many instances that formulated Hussain's future political aspirations.

Politics of ethnicity

The late 1970s and the early 1980s saw a rapid influx of immigrant populations into Karachi. These included war victims from Afghanistan, economic migrants from NWFP, Balochistan and Punjab, and the Biharis (post-1971 arrivals from Bangladesh).[23]

Bihari cause and arrest: 1979

The political strife of the APMSO bifurcated into the issue of stranded Pakistanis in Bangladesh an on 14 August 1979, Hussain participated in a demonstration at the Mazar-e-Quaid for the safe return of stranded Pakistanis, also called the Biharis. Following the demonstration, Hussain was arrested and sentenced on 2 October 1979 for 9 months imprisonment and flogging with five strokes. Hussain was later released on 28 April 1980 after he had served his sentence.[24]

Ethnic riots: 1985—1986

The urban centres of Karachi and Hyderabad had increasingly become ethnically diverse and riots along ethnic lines were commonplace.[25] In May 1985, a Pathan minivan driver struck and killed a muhajir schoolgirl inciting the first Pathan-Muhajir ethnic riot. Later, following an unsuccessful raid on an Afghan heroine processing and distribution centre in Sohrab Goth by the army, Pathan and Afghan thugs turned their ire on muhajir residents of Aligarh Colony.[23]
The Aligarh Colony massacre instigated the bloody riots of November–December 1986. These riots saw the popularity of MQM and its leader Altaf Hussain rise and the party's ideology was greatly influenced as a result.[23]

Pacco Qillo address and arrest: October 1986

Before October 1986, the urban city of Hyderabad was largely dominated by the Sindhi nationalist party Jeay Sindh Qaumi Mahaz (JSQM) founded by G. M. Syed giving rise to the nationalist slogan "Sindhu Desh" (or "Sindhi nation").[26] The only Muhajir political movement countering the JSQM were led by Syed Mubarak Ali Shah of Moti Mahal, Nawab Zahid Ali Khan and Nawab Muzaffar Hussain. After the death of these Muhajir stalwarts, the Urdu-speaking people of Hyderabad yearned for a charismatic Muhajir leadership.[27]
On 31 October 1986, Altaf Hussain gave his first public address in Hyderabad at the site of the historic Pacco Qillo, where he was greeted by throngs of crowds. After his address, his message was well received by the Urdu-speaking people of Hyderabad and Hussain was able to fill the void left by the deaths of Muhajir leaders.[27] Hussain and a few of his companions, were arrested by security personnel after his address implicating him in several alleged criminal cases.[24] His arrest enraged his supporters who launched public movements for his release. The charges against Hussain and his companions were later dropped and they were released from the Central Prison Karachi on 24 February 1987.[24]

Arrest and local bodies election: 1987

In 1987 the government began widespread arrests of Mutahidda Qaumi Movement workers all over Sindh. Altaf Hussain surrendered to law enforcement agencies on 30 August 1987 on the condition that the further arrests of his party's workers would be stopped immediately. During Hussain's imprisonment MQM placed highly in the local bodies election of 1987, and there was pressure to release Hussain and he was released on 7 January 1988.[24]

Sindhi-Muhajir accord: 1988

In early 1987, Altaf Hussain issued MQM's Charter of Resolutions (Qarardad-i-Maqasid) which formed the basis for the party's ideology. The MQM charter was paramount in expressing many of the "long-standing grievances" of Sindhi nationalists,[28] and a cooperative arrangement was worked out between the MQM and various Sindhi nationalist parties in early 1988.[29] Apart from the points stipulated in the party's original resolution, Hussain also introduced the idea of Muhajir being a "fifth subnationality" alongside the PunjabisPathansBalochSindhis.[30]

Nationalistic woes

The Karachi Declaration: 1988

The 1988 general elections proved quite clearly that the voting patterns in Sindh were based on ethnic lines where thePakistan Peoples Party and the MQM won almost all seats in the national assembly. The PPP had derived its support from the Sindhi population in the province, whilst the MQM from the Muhajirs. At this point in time, in less than four years of its making, MQM emerged as the third largest political party in Pakistan.[31]
PPP had been successful in Sindh but didn't fare quite well in the other provinces and therefore had to resort to forming a coalition government. Hussain and his party MQM offered their support but insisted on a formal agreement between the PPP and the MQM. This 59-point MQM-PPP accord, known as the Karachi Declaration, was signed on 2 December 1988.[32] It reiterated many of the points defined in the earlier MQM charter. However, when Benazir Bhutto came into power, she was unwilling or unable to commit to her part of the bargain. Her reluctance in this matter was largely interpreted by muhajirs as largely pro-Sindhi and rather anti-Muhajir.[33] When the declaration was not implemented violence erupted between APMSO and the PSF, the student wings of the MQM and the PPP.[32]

MQM-IJI agreement

Shunned by Bhutto's disavowal, Altaf Hussain secretly approached Nawaz Sharif, leader of the Islami Jamhoori Ittehad (IJI). The IJI was an opposition coalition eager to topple Bhutto's government. As a result of their meeting, a formal agreement between the MQM and the IJI came to pass. However, when Sharif later came into power, he couldn't honour those commitments either.[32] Hussain became increasingly harsh and hostile in his opinions regarding the governing parties and would often accuse them of political hypocrisy. Seeing that striving for justice in a constitutional capacity was futile, ethnic militancy thrived. The gulf between Muhajirs and Sindhis widened leading to several cases of "ethnic cleansing" in Hyderabad.[34]