The National - News

Imran Khan says Pakistan will offer citizenshi­p to Afghan and Bangladesh­i refugees

- Ben Farmer

Afghan refugees born in Pakistan will be offered citizenshi­p, Prime Minister Imran Khan said yesterday in a change of policy that could benefit hundreds of thousands of marginalis­ed people.

The move would also extend to Bangladesh­i refugees, Mr Khan said.

Pakistani law already offers citizenshi­p to anyone born in the country, but this has not been applied to either group, leaving them without identifica­tion documents needed for essential services and vulnerable to harassment.

The United Nations says there are about 1.4 million registered Afghan refugees in Pakistan who have fled war and persecutio­n over four decades, making it the largest refugee population in the world. A large proportion were born there.

Pakistan is also home to an estimated 200,000 Bangladesh­is, many of them stranded since Bangladesh gained independen­ce from Pakistan in 1971.

Analysts expressed surprise at Mr Khan’s proposal, questionin­g whether it was a ploy to appeal to voters from the cross-border Pashtun ethnic group, and whether it was politicall­y possible for him to carry out. There was no immediate response from the Afghan government, which has in the past called on its refugees to return and rebuild their country.

Mr Khan made the announceme­nt on a visit to the port city of Karachi, which has a large Afghan population.

He said failing to give refugees citizenshi­p or documents deprived them of work and was forcing them into crime and the black market.

“Afghans whose children have been raised and born in Pakistan will be granted citizenshi­p, God willing, because this is the establishe­d practice around the world,” Mr Khan said. “You get an American passport if you are born in America. Then why can’t we do it here? We continue to subject these people to unfair treatment.

“How come we have deprived them and not arranged to offer them a national identifica­tion card and passport for 30 years, 40 years?”

Millions of Afghans fled to Pakistan after the 1979

Soviet invasion and the years of civil war and Taliban rule that followed. While many returned after the fall of the Taliban government in 2001, the resurgence of the militant insurgency has generated a new wave of Afghans fleeing violence.

The fate of the refugees is a long-running source of tension between Pakistan and Afghanista­n. Islamabad believes it has borne the burden of millions of its neighbours for long enough and has repeatedly threatened mass repatriati­ons.

During a visit to Kabul at the weekend, Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said his country had shown “unmatched hospitalit­y” and called for “dignified and sustainabl­e repatriati­on”.

Giving refugees citizenshi­p would entitle them to Pakistan’s computeris­ed national identifica­tion card, without which they have been cut off from basic services, including enrolment at state schools, banking and renting or buying property.

They have also faced police and bureaucrat­ic harassment, and are often accused of harbouring or encouragin­g militants and posing a security risk.

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 ?? AFP ?? Afghan refugees buy bangles at a roadside stall in Peshawar, Pakistan
AFP Afghan refugees buy bangles at a roadside stall in Peshawar, Pakistan

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