The Denver Post

Pakistan is demanding deportatio­ns of Afghans

- By Zia Ur-rehman and Christina Goldbaum

KARACHI, PAKISTAN>> Hundreds of police officers f looded into a Karachi slum around midnight, surroundin­g the homes of Afghan migrants and pounding at their doors. Under the harsh glare of floodlight­s, the police told women to stand to one side of their homes and demanded the men present immigratio­n papers proving they were living in Pakistan legally. Those without documents were lined up in the street, some shaking with fear for what was to come: Detention in a Pakistani prison and deportatio­n to Talibancon­trolled Afghanista­n.

The police raid Friday in Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city, followed an abrupt decision by Pakistani authoritie­s last week to deport the more than 1 million Afghan migrants living illegally in the country.

“Police entered every house without warning,” said Abdul Bashar, an Afghan migrant whose two cousins were among the 51 people who police said were arrested during the neighborho­od sweep. “The fear has left us restless, making it difficult for us to sleep peacefully at night.”

On Tuesday, Pakistan’s Interior Ministry announced that migrants residing illegally in the country had 28 days to leave voluntaril­y, and it offered a “reward” for informatio­n leading to their arrests once that deadline passed.

Although Pakistani officials say the crackdown applies to all foreign citizens, the policy is largely believed to be targeting Afghans, who make up the vast majority of migrants in Pakistan.

While Afghans have faced harassment in Pakistan for decades, this announceme­nt was the government’s most far-reaching and explicit action affecting Afghan migrants. It was widely seen as a sign of the increasing hostility between the Pakistani government and the Taliban authoritie­s in neighborin­g Afghanista­n as they clash over extremist groups operating across their borders.

Over the past year, Pakistan has experience­d a surge in terrorist attacks, both by militant groups that have found haven in Afghanista­n under the Taliban administra­tion and by others whose fighters have been pushed into Pakistan following a brutal Talibanled crackdown on their ranks. Some former Taliban fighters have also migrated to Pakistan to wage jihad against the Pakistani government.

For months, Pakistani authoritie­s have pleaded with the Taliban to rein in extremist violence stemming from Afghan soil. But Taliban officials have rebuffed those calls, instead offering to mediate talks between Pakistani authoritie­s and the militants.

The growing animosity between the two countries has threatened to further destabiliz­e a region that is already a political tinderbox.

On one side of the contested border, the Taliban administra­tion in Afghanista­n is armed with a vast arsenal of American-made weapons left during the U. S. withdrawal and feels encouraged by its victory over a global superpower. Many within the Taliban have also harbored resentment toward Pakistan for decades.

On the other is nucleararm­ed Pakistan, which has struggled with military coups, volatile politics and waves of sectarian violence since its founding 75 years ago.

Caught in between are the roughly 1.7 million Afghans living in Pakistan illegally, according to Pakistani officials. Among them are about 600,000 people — including journalist­s, activists and former police officers, soldiers and former officials with the toppled U.s.-backed government — who fled after the Taliban seized power, according to United Nations estimates.

Many of those migrants face a stark choice: Either return to Afghanista­n, where they fear persecutio­n by the Taliban, or remain in Pakistan and face harassment from Pakistani authoritie­s.

“We have been left in the lurch,” said Mahmood Kochai, an Afghan journalist who fled to Pakistan with his wife and six children after the Taliban seized power.

Like many Afghan migrants in the capital, Islamabad, Kochai arrived in Pakistan on a temporary visa, anticipati­ng an asylum decision from Western embassies in Islamabad. Soon after arriving, he applied for sanctuary in the United States under a refugee program for Afghans who worked with the U. S. government or U.s.-funded organizati­ons.

But since he applied more than a year ago, he has not heard anything back, Kochai said. Now, he is concerned about the expiration of their Pakistani visas in two months.

In Karachi, home to a sizable population of Afghan migrants, news of migrants getting arrested at security checkpoint­s on roads and in markets during routine outings has stoked panic.

Ali, a former Afghan security official who would give only his first name because of his immigrant status in Pakistan, said he and his neighbors — also Afghan migrants — had barely gone outside for two weeks, fearing getting arrested and being sent back to Afghanista­n. If he is deported, he worries he faces arrest — or worse — because of his affiliatio­n with the U.s.-backed government.

The new policy has drawn criticism from human rights groups, which say deporting Afghans could put them at risk in Afghanista­n. Despite the Taliban’s policy of blanket amnesty for Afghans who worked with the U.S.backed government, human rights monitors have documented hundreds of abuses against former government officials since the Taliban seized power.

Pakistani officials have defended the policy as necessary to protect Pakistan from extremist violence. In a news conference Tuesday, the Pakistani caretaker government’s interior minister, Sarfraz Bugti, asserted that Afghans were involved in 14 of the 24 major terrorist attacks in Pakistan this year.

“There are attacks on us from Afghanista­n, and Afghan nationals are involved in those attacks,” he said. Taliban officials denied those claims.

The aggressive approach echoes similar crackdowns on Afghan migrants in years past, observers say. After a string of major terrorist attacks in 2016, Pakistani authoritie­s began a sweeping campaign to uproot Afghan migrants, forcing about 600,000 back to Afghanista­n. Human Rights Watch characteri­zed Pakistan’s actions as the world’s “largest unlawful mass forced return of refugees” in recent times.

“Afghans always get stuck when foreign relations break down between Afghanista­n and Pakistan,” said Sanaa Alimia, researcher and author of “Refugee Cities: How Afghans Changed Urban Pakistan.”

“That usually manifests itself as harassment of ordinary Afghans in the country and those getting harassed are usually in the lowest income groups, they are an easy target,” she added.

Pakistan has not signed the 1951 Geneva Convention­s and its 1967 protocol covering the status of refugees, which protects people seeking asylum. Instead, Pakistan’s Foreigners’ Act grants the authoritie­s the right to apprehend, detain and expel foreigners — including refugees and asylum- seekers — who lack valid documentat­ion.

After previous crackdowns, many Afghans have either remained in Pakistan or returned after being deported — underlinin­g the limit of the Pakistani government’s ability to repatriate Afghans, experts say.

Now, with the government facing dueling economic and political crises, it is unclear how the Pakistani authoritie­s would repatriate such a large number of refugees, a deportatio­n campaign requiring substantia­l personnel as well as military and intelligen­ce resources.

Maulvi Abdul Jabbar Takhari, the Taliban’s consul general in Karachi, said that many Afghans who had been arrested possess legal documents allowing them to live in Pakistan and that Taliban officials had been trying to secure their release.

Takhari urged Pakistan’s government “to provide a specific time frame for undocument­ed refugees so that they can peacefully and respectful­ly wind up their businesses and return to their homeland.”

But for Afghan migrants, the wave of arrests has been a chilling reminder of their precarious status in Pakistan. Many arrived in the country decades ago, after the Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanista­n in 1979 and after the civil war that followed the Soviet withdrawal.

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