Pakistan wants to expel all Afghan refugees from the country, says
Afghan embassy
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[February 19, 2025]
By MUNIR AHMED
ISLAMABAD (AP) — Pakistan wants to remove all Afghan refugees from the
country and they face expulsion in the near future, the Afghan embassy
in Islamabad warned Wednesday.
The embassy issued a strongly worded statement about Pakistan’s plans,
saying Afghan nationals in the capital, Islamabad, and the nearby
garrison city of Rawalpindi have been subjected to arrests, searches,
and orders from the police to leave the twin cities and relocate to
other parts of Pakistan.
“This process of detaining Afghans, which began without any formal
announcement, has not been officially communicated to the Embassy of
Afghanistan in Islamabad through any formal correspondence,” it said.
“Ultimately, officials from Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs
confirmed that there is a definitive and final plan to deport all Afghan
refugees not only from Islamabad and Rawalpindi but also from the entire
country in the near future,” the embassy said.
There was no immediate comment from the Pakistani government on the
embassy statement.
The latest development follows Pakistan’s threat to deport Afghans
living in the country illegally. Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz
Sharif approved a deadline of March 31 to deport those awaiting
relocation to third countries unless their cases are swiftly processed
by the governments who have agreed to take them.
The Afghan embassy criticized "the short timeframe" given and "the
unilateral nature of Pakistan’s decision”.
Besides the hundreds of thousands living illegally in Pakistan, some
1.45 million Afghans are registered with the UNHCR as refugees. Pakistan
says those who were registered earlier had their stay extended until
June 2025, and will not be arrested or deported at least until the
extension expires.
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Earlier this month, Shafqat Ali Khan, the spokesman at Pakistan's
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said: “This resettlement problem can’t
be indefinite. So, for us, the Afghans who are here, awaiting
resettlement, also has to be a transitory phase. This is not a
permanent thing.”
He said Pakistan has been collaborating with Western countries to
expedite the resettlement program and “will continue to do that.”
In the past three years, tens of thousands of Afghans have fled to
Pakistan. Many of them were approved for resettlement in the U.S.
through a program that helps people at risk because of their work
during the war with the American government, media, aid agencies and
rights groups. However, after U.S. President Donald Trump paused
U.S. refugee programs last month, around 20,000 Afghans are now in
limbo in Pakistan.
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They have been facing harassment and arrest since October 2023, when
Pakistan began cracking down on foreigners living in the country
illegally.
Although the government said the campaign was not aimed at Afghans,
they make up the majority of foreigners in Pakistan.
The International Organization for Migration reported an increase in
deportation of Afghans in January.
The IOM this week said Afghans were being deported from Islamabad
and Rawalpindi. It said there was a 13% increase in Afghans
returning home from Jan. 16 to 31 compared to the first two weeks in
January. It said 824,568 Afghans have returned home since 2023.
Ahmad Shah, a member of an Afghan advocacy group, urged Pakistan on
Wednesday to allow Afghans waiting for relocation to continue living
in Islamabad at least until the Trump administration makes a final
decision about their fate.
He said it would be hard for them to visit Western embassies in the
Pakistani capital if they were moved to other areas.
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