Afghans in KP oppose repatriation plan

Published March 16, 2025 Updated March 16, 2025 10:43am

KOHAT: Afghan refugees living here have urged Pakistani authorities not to force them into leaving the country by March 31.

They claim that their third generation was settled in Pakistan and the Taliban administration in Kabul openly refused to accept them as Afghan nationals.

Haji Malik Mujahid Shinwari, an elder of the refugees, told Dawn that they couldn’t go to their country even to attend funerals.

He claimed that most Afghan refugees possessed Pakistani computerised national identity cards and did business in major cities like Islamabad, Lahore, Karachi and Peshawar.

“It’s unfair to trouble refugees by setting expulsion deadlines,” he said.

The elder said many refugees had Pakistani spouses, while their children were enrolled in local schools and colleges.

He also urged Kabul to maintain “good” relations with Islamabad to ensure Afghan refugees don’t suffer in Pakistan.

Mr Shinwari said there had not been any political and economic instability in Afghanistan since 1980, so refugees had no future there.

“We’re anxious due to the prevailing uncertainty,” he said, urging Pakistani authorities to allow the refugees with valid documents to stay in the country.

When contacted, the refugee camp’s administrator insisted that the Afghan refugee cards, which were valid until June 30, 2025, were not travel documents.

Meanwhile, the Kohat Chamber of Commerce and Industry has demanded the resolution of issues at the local small industrial estate to encourage investment and development.

In a statement, the KCCI said as the industrial estate lacked facilities, only 21 factories had been established on 80 plots there since 1982. A delegation led by KCCI founding president Rashid Paracha and comprising senior vice president Fahimullah and other office-bearers met with deputy commissioner Abdul Akram Chitrali and informed him about their issues. The DC promised their early resolution.

Published in Dawn, March 16th, 2025

Must Read

Ukraine, Nato and the future of Europe

Ukraine, Nato and the future of Europe

The spectacle of the verbal spat between US President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Vlodomyr Zelensky in the Oval Office was stark evidence of a tectonic shift in longstanding US foreign policy on Ukraine, Russia, Europe and Nato.

Opinion

Editorial

After the review
Updated 16 Mar, 2025

After the review

Should prepare economy for durable growth by attracting foreign private investments to boost productivity and exports.
Embracing crypto
16 Mar, 2025

Embracing crypto

IT seems a little prod was all it took for Pakistan to finally ‘embrace the future’. The Pakistan Crypto Council...
Fault lines
16 Mar, 2025

Fault lines

IT was a distressing spectacle, though a sadly predictable one. As the National Assembly took up for discussion the...
Revised solar policy
Updated 15 Mar, 2025

Revised solar policy

Criticism policy revisions misplaced as these will increase payback periods for consumers with oversized solar systems.
Toxic prejudice
15 Mar, 2025

Toxic prejudice

WITH far-right movements on the march across the world, it is no surprise that anti-Muslim bias is witnessing high...
Children in jails
15 Mar, 2025

Children in jails

PAKISTAN’S children in prison have often been treated like adult criminals. The Sindh government’s programme to...