Bay of Plenty Times

Afghans in hiding in Pakistan

Thousands at risk of being sent ‘home’ to country they have never lived in

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Born and raised in Pakistan to parents who fled neighbouri­ng Afghanista­n half a century ago, an 18-year-old found himself at the mercy of police in Karachi who took his cash, phone and motorbike, and sent him to a deportatio­n centre.

Scared and bewildered, he spent three days there before he was sent back to Afghanista­n, a place he has never been to, with nothing but the clothes on his back.

The youth is one of at least 1.7 million Afghans who made Pakistan their home as their country sank deeper into decades of war. But they’ve been living there illegally and are now the target of a harsh crackdown on migrants who Pakistan says must leave.

Some 600,000 Afghans have returned home since last October, when the crackdown began, meaning at least a million remain in Pakistan in hiding. They’ve retreated from public view, abandoning their jobs and rarely leaving their neighbourh­oods out of fear they could be next for deportatio­n.

It’s harder for them to earn money, rent accommodat­ion, buy food or get medical help because they run the risk of getting caught by police or being reported to authoritie­s by Pakistanis.

The youth, who had been working as a mechanic in an auto shop since he was 15, spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of arrest and deportatio­n.

He has applied for the same documentat­ion that his family has, but he won’t get it. Pakistan isn’t issuing paperwork for Afghan refugees or their children.

“My life is here. I have no friends or family in Afghanista­n, nothing,” the young man told The Associated Press. “I wanted to come back (to Pakistan) sooner, but things had to calm down first,” he said, referring to the anti-migrant raids sweeping the country at the time.

Taliban authoritie­s gave him 2500 afghanis (NZ$58) once he entered Afghanista­n to start a new life. They dispatched him to northeaste­rn Takhar province, where he slept in mosques and religious schools because he knew nobody to stay with. He passed his time playing cricket and football, and borrowed other people’s phones to call his family.

Six weeks later, he travelled from Takhar to the Afghan capital, Kabul, then to eastern Nangarhar province. He walked for hours in the dark before meeting up with human smugglers hired by his brother in Pakistan. Their job was to get him to Peshawar, the capital of Pakistan’s northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province, for the price of $120.

He is relieved to be reunited with his family. But he is vulnerable.

Police have daubed numbers on homes in his neighbourh­ood to show how many people live there and how many have documentat­ion. Hundreds of Afghan families have fled the area since the operation began. There are fewer people to hide among.

Such neighbourh­oods in Karachi are easily home to tens of thousands of Afghans. But they have no drainage systems, health care or education facilities. There are few women on the streets, and those who venture out wear burqas, often the blue ones more commonly seen in Afghanista­n.

Lawyer Moniza Kakar, who works with the Afghan community in Karachi, said there are generation­s of families with no paperwork. Without it, they can’t access basic services, schools or hospitals.

Afghans were already under the radar before the crackdown, and rumours abound that Pakistan wants to expel all Afghans, even those with documentat­ion. Pakistan says no such decision has been made.

Mohammad Khan Mughal, 32, was born in Karachi and has three children. Before the crackdown started, the Afghan ran a tandoor business. Police told him to close down.

“My customers started complainin­g because they couldn’t buy bread from me,” he said. He and his family went to the southweste­rn city of Quetta in Baluchista­n province to escape the raids.

He returned to Karachi a few days later, and has no intention of leaving.

“This is my home,” he said, with pride and sadness. “This is my city.”

This is my home. This is my city.

Mohammad Khan Mughal

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Afghan families board a bus to depart for their homeland, in Karachi, Pakistan. Since Pakistan announced a crackdown on migrants last year, some 600,000 have been deported.
Photo / AP Afghan families board a bus to depart for their homeland, in Karachi, Pakistan. Since Pakistan announced a crackdown on migrants last year, some 600,000 have been deported.

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