Arab News

National Geographic ‘Afghan girl’ arrested in Pakistan

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PESHAWAR: An Afghan woman immortaliz­ed on a celebrated National Geographic magazine cover as a green-eyed 12-year-old girl was arrested Wednesday for living in Pakistan on fraudulent identity papers.

The haunting image of Sharbat Gula, taken in a Pakistan refugee camp by photograph­er Steve McCurry in the 1980s, became the most famous cover image in the magazine’s history.

Her arrest highlights the desperate measures many Afghans are willing to take to avoid returning to their war-torn homeland as Pakistan cracks down on undocument­ed foreigners.

Pakistan’s Federal Investigat­ion Agency ( FIA) arrested Gul for fraud following a two-year investigat­ion on her and her husband, who has absconded.

Investigat­ors, who have uncovered thousands of fraud cases over the last decade, launched a probe into her applicatio­n shortly after she procured the card.

“FIA arrested Sharbat Gula, an Afghan woman, for obtaining a fake ID card,” Shahid Ilyas, an official of the National Database Registrati­on Authority (NADRA), told AFP.

Ilyas said the authoritie­s were also seeking three NADRA officials found responsibl­e for issuing Pakistan’s national identity card to Gula, who have been at large since the fraud was uncovered. He said that Gula faces seven to 14 years in prison and a fine of $3,000-$5,000 if convicted.

In reality she is unlikely to serve such a harsh sentence — many Afghans who have been convicted in similar cases have been deported before they could be sent to prison.

Officials say Gula applied for a Pakistani identity card in Peshawar in April 2014, using the name Sharbat Bibi.

Thousands of Afghan refugees have managed to dodge Pakistan’s computeris­ed system to get an identity card. The photo attached to her applicatio­n featured the same piercing green eyes seen in McCurry’s famous image, only older.

The original photograph was taken in 1984 in a refugee camp in northwest Pakistan during the Soviet occupation of Afghanista­n.

McCurry later tracked her down, after a 17-year search, to a remote Afghan village in 2002 where she was married to a baker, and the mother of three daughters.

Pakistan has for decades provided safe haven for millions of Afghans who fled their country after the Soviet invasion of 1979.

The country hosts 1.4 million registered Afghan refugees, according to UNHCR, making it the third-largest refugee hosting nation in the world.

The agency also estimates a further one million unregister­ed refugees are in the country.

Since 2009, Islamabad has repeatedly pushed back a deadline for them to return, but fears are growing that the latest cutoff date in March 2017 will be final.

Meanwhile refugees are increasing­ly worried about their future in Pakistan as the country cracks down on those who have obtained fake ID cards.

Officials say NADRA has so far reverified 91 million ID cards and detected 60,675 fraudulent cards.

A NADRA official told AFP that 2,473 foreigners, mostly Afghans, had voluntaril­y surrendere­d their ID cards which were obtained fraudulent­ly.

 ??  ?? A handout photograph released by Pakistan’s Federal Investigat­ion Agency (FIA) shows Afghan Sharbat Gula, the ‘Afghan Girl’ who appeared on the cover of a 1985 edition of National Geographic magazine, waiting for a court hearing in Peshawar.
A handout photograph released by Pakistan’s Federal Investigat­ion Agency (FIA) shows Afghan Sharbat Gula, the ‘Afghan Girl’ who appeared on the cover of a 1985 edition of National Geographic magazine, waiting for a court hearing in Peshawar.

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