has expelled thousands of Afghan nationals in the past few days in a fresh repatriation drive following the expiry of a March 31 deadline for them to leave.
Afghans holding Afghan Citizen Cards (ACC), issued by Pakistani authorities and held by 800,000 people, according to the United Nations, were told to leave or face deportation to Afghanistan after the deadline.
On Tuesday, the , the UN’s Refugee Agency, reported that at least 8,906 Afghan nationals have been deported since April 1.
A Pakistani government official confirmed the move and stated, “our campaign is gaining momentum, and the crackdown against illegal immigrants has been intensified.”
The government in neighboring condemned the “violence” used by Pakistan to expel Afghans from the country.
Human rights groups have raised concerns
Pakistan started the .
Islamabad said the drive is part of a campaign aimed at clamping down on migrants who are in the country illegally.
About 845,000 Afghans have left Pakistan over the past 18 months, figures from the International Organization for Migration show. Pakistan says three million Afghans remain.
Afghans crossing the border have told French news agency AFP that they left their homes without taking all their belongings or money, with some rounded up and taken directly to the border.
“Pakistan is abandoning its international commitment to not send people back to where their rights are at risk,” Fereshta Abbasi of Afghanistan Human Rights Watch said.
Kabul has termed the repatriation as forced deportation.”The mistreatment inflicted by neighboring countries is unacceptable and intolerable,” said the Taliban’s Ministry of and Repatriation wrote on X.
“All refugees should be able to take their money, belongings and property with them,” it added.
The government also accused Islamabad for using Afghan migrants for “political goals.”
Kabul, Islamabad row amid rising crackdown
Over the last three years, Pakistan’s relationship with neighboring Afghanistan has deteriorated. Islamabad holds the Taliban authorities in Afghanistan responsible for their inability to control the operations of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a militant group that formed in 2007 and has conducted .
As cross-border tensions with the Taliban regime escalated, concerns were also raised about the well-being of Afghans in Pakistan amid reports of purported intimidation and arrests. The UN special rapporteur has expressed his worries, stating that Afghans in the area deserve more humane treatment.
Pakistan said it plans to accelerate the drive to repatriate millions of Afghans who crossed the border during decades of armed conflict in their home country and after the Taliban seized power in 2021.
Edited by: Louis Oelofse
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