Hazara Province Movement (Urdu/Hindko:) is a movement aimed at gaining a separate provincial status for the Hazara Division of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.[1]
The movement began in 1957, when regional lawyers Mufti Idrees and Abdul Khaliq first raised the question of a separate province, Kohistan.[2] In 1987, Hazara Qaumi Mahaz (HQM) was founded by Muhammad Asif Malik advocate, a prominent advocate who campaigned for the creation of a separate province.[3] Hazara Division is linguistically and ethnically diverse which distinguish it from the rest of the Pashtun-majority province. According to the 2023 Census of Pakistan, the three largest ethnolinguistic groups in Hazara are Hindkowans (56%), Pashtuns (20.7%) and Kohistanis (14.6%).[4] The movement has a strong support among the residents of Hazara region, also known as Hazarewals.[5]
The Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan was passed on 8 April 2010, which among other changes, renamed the North-West Frontier Province to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The name change of the province was met with strong opposition from the people of Hazara and protests erupted in the region with wheel and shutter jam strikes. Abbottabad became the nerve center of the movement. On 10 April, the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Police fired at unarmed protesters, leaving 7 dead and dozens injured.[6] Allegedly, the firing was ordered by the coalition government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, led by the Awami National Party.[7] This is one of the most violent incidents of police brutality in Pakistan, occurring before the Model Town Lahore incident, whose FIR has not been registered still today.[8]
In 2014, the resolution for the creation of the Hazara Province was adopted by the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Assembly.[9] The movement slowed down and shrunk to only observing the 12th of April martyrs anniversary, the death of the movement's pioneer, Baba Haider Zaman, in 2018.[10]
In 2020, the movement started again when the government began work for the creation of the South Punjab province.[11] Hazara's leaders sought to include the creation of the Hazara Province along with it.[12] A bill for the creation of the Hazara province has also been tabled in the Parliament of Pakistan.[13] Another resolution was passed by the KP assembly in 2022, calling for the implementation of the 2014 resolution.[14]
The Hazara Province Movement saw revival in 2024 after the Awami National Party leader Aimal Wali Khan suggested the province to be renamed as Pakhtunkhwa, drawing criticism from the Hazara Division-based political parties who vowed for a separate provincial status.[15] [16] [17]