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Afghans in Pakistan

Afghans in Pakistan (Urdu: افغان مهاجرين, Afghān muhājirīn, lit.'Afghan migrants') are temporary residents from Afghanistan who are registered in Pakistan as refugees and asylum seekers.[2] They fall under the jurisdiction of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).[3][4] Most of them were born and raised in Pakistan during the last four decades.[5] Additionally, there are also Special Immigrant Visa applicants awaiting to immmigrate to the United States.[6][7][8][9]

Afghans in Pakistan
افغان مهاجرين
Total population
c.4.4 million (2023)[1]
Languages
Native:
Pashto, Dari, Hazaragi
Additional:
Urdu, English
Religion
Islam
(Sunni majority, Shia minority)

The Pakistani government began admitting Afghans after the beginning of the Soviet–Afghan War in 1979; by the end of 2001, there were over four million of them on the Pakistani side.[10][11][12] About 75% of them have returned to their native country of Afghanistan since 2002.

As of October 2023, the United Nations estimates that nearly 3.7 million Afghans reside in Pakistan, while Pakistani authorities believe the number to be as high as 4.4 million.[13][14][15] Of these, only a few hold the required documentation allowing them to legally stay in Pakistan.[13] As of June 2023, approximately 1,333,749 registered refugees still remain in Pakistan according to UNHCR.[10] On 3 October 2023, the Interior Minister of Pakistan Sarfraz Bugti ordered that all undocumented immigrants, mainly nearly 1.73 million Afghan nationals, to voluntarily leave the country by 1 November 2023, or face deportation in a crackdown.[16]

History and migration edit

 
The border between Afghanistan and Pakistan is the Durand Line. Most Afghan refugees in Pakistan reside in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, not very far from the Durand Line.[10]

Afghans have been migrating back and forth between Afghanistan and what is now Pakistan since at least the times of the Ghaznavids in the 10th century. Before the mid-19th century, Afghanistan was recognized as the Durrani Empire and ruled by a succession of Afghan kings with their capitals in Kandahar, Kabul, and Peshawar. In his 1857 review of John William Kaye's The Afghan War, Friedrich Engels described Afghanistan as:

... an extensive country of Asia ... between Persia and the Indies, and in the other direction between the Hindu Kush and the Indian Ocean. It formerly included the Persian provinces of Khorassan and Kohistan, together with Herat, Beluchistan, Cashmere, and Sinde, and a considerable part of the Punjab ... Its principal cities are Kabul, the capital, Ghuznee, Peshawer, and Kandahar.[17]

Interaction and migration by the region's native people were common. After the Second Anglo-Afghan War, the late-19th-century Durand Line demarcated the spheres of influence of British India's Mortimer Durand and the Afghan amir Abdur Rahman Khan. The single-page agreement in 1947 ending political interference beyond the frontier between Afghanistan and the British Indian Empire, inherited by Pakistan in 1947,[18] divided the indigenous Pashtun tribes.

One of the most notable periods of migration began in 1979. As the Soviet–Afghan War began, many Afghan citizens began to flee the country.[19] The ensuing decade of violence at the hands of Soviet forces encouraged thousands more to follow, escaping what some considered to be "difficult, if not impossible, situations," which included the threat of mass arrests, executions, attacks on public gatherings, the destruction of Afghan infrastructure, as well as the targeting of Afghanistan's agricultural and industrial sectors.[20] In total, nearly three million Afghan refugees escaped to Pakistan and about two million to Iran throughout the decade, though some figures estimate that by 1990, nearly 4.5 million undocumented Afghan refugees resided throughout Pakistan.[20] Aided by the UNHCR, and primarily funded by the United States government, Pakistan continued to accept and support the inclusion of these Afghan refugees throughout the decade. In late 1988, roughly 3.3 million Afghan refugees were housed in 340 refugee camps along the Afghan-Pakistan border in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. It was reported by The New York Times in November 1988 that about 100,000 refugees lived in Peshawar and more than two million lived in KP (known as the North-West Frontier Province at the time). On the outskirts of Peshawar, the Jalozai camp was one of the largest refugee camps in the NWFP.

According to one researcher, the refugees consisted of various groups of migrants. Some were individuals "who came from politically prominent and wealthy families with personal and business assets outside Afghanistan; a small group who arrived [had] assets that they could bring with them such as trucks, cars and limited funds and who have done relatively well in Pakistan integrating into the new society and engaging successfully in commerce; those refugees who came from the ranks of the well-educated and include professionals such as doctors, engineers and teachers; refugees who escaped with household goods and herds of sheep, cattle and yaks but for the most part must be helped to maintain themselves; the fifth and the largest group, constituting about 60 per cent of the refugees, are ordinary Afghans who arrived with nothing and are largely dependent on Pakistan and international efforts for sustenance."[21]

Though through migration many Afghan refugees avoided immense violence, they were still subject to political injustice and discrimination at the hands of their host country—Pakistan. The subsequent decade saw considerable change in regard to the attitudes and feelings toward Afghan refugees throughout Pakistan. Though the nation initially welcomed these migrants, utilizing "terms from Islamic discourse to justify welcoming [these] refugees in their time of need", the nation quickly turned on their subjects, blaming them for a number of issues present throughout the country over the following 3 decades (until the eventual repatriation from 2001 to 2009), including terrorism, unemployment, disease, along with various other conflicts.[20] This, to some degree, can be attributed to a dependency on U.S. funding, which provided nearly $160 million in funds to Pakistans' government in 1984, rising to nearly $630 million in 1987.[20] These funds arguably persuaded Pakistans participation in housing Afghan refugees as opposed to humanitarian issues. As a result, Afghan refugees faced a number of inequalities, including a lack of political representation. In order to migrate to Pakistan, Afghan refugees were required to register to one of the seven Islamic parties pre-approved by the Pakistani government. In doing so, the Pakistani government hoped to prevent the emergence of a single, political entity on behalf of the Afghan refugees, and thus, prevent a "Palestinization" of Pakistan.[20] As a result, the voice of Afghan migrants was largely silenced.

By the mid-1980s, the political injustice toward Afghan refugees began to escalate to violence. In 1986, a new political party began to emerge. Known primarily as the "Muhajir Qaumi Movement" (MQM), though also referred to as the "Refugee National Movement," this party sought to gain rights for the 'muhajir' refugees on which 'Pakistan had been built.' Yet, Afghan refugees were not included in this representation, and instead were made a target by the political leaders of the MQM. Included in the MQM's 'Charter of Demands', they requested the immediate placement of Afghan refugees in camps, and the subsequent expropriation of their property, causing a number of riots by Afghan refugees to erupt throughout Pakistan. As the MQM continued to grow throughout the decade, so too did the exclusion and violence toward Afghan refugees. In addition to the violence, the MQM created a rhetoric that largely altered the perception of Afghan refugees, as they were labeled as extremist and alien to the 'secular' Islamic state that the MQM hoped to create within Pakistan.[20]

This 'extremist' rhetoric resurfaced after 9/11, and was evidence of the final shift in the attitudes held by Pakistan toward Afghan refugees. Prior to 9/11, the Pakistani government had already stopped the issuing of food rations to refugee villages, yet following the attacks on the World Trade center, and the subsequent global focus on Afghanistan, Pakistan decided to move toward the complete repatriation of Afghan refugees. Claiming that these refugees were to blame for the growing security concerns within the country, along with the subsequent branding of these individuals as terrorists, Pakistan, with support of the UNHCR, began to facilitate 'voluntary repatriation'. From March to December 2002, Pakistan 'voluntarily repatriated' nearly 1.52 million refugees, and an additional 5 million over the following six years. Yet, there is sufficient reasoning to believe that these were not as 'voluntary' as advertised, as a joint report from the UNHCR and Pakistan suggested 82% of refugees reported to 'not wish to repatriate'.[20] Regardless, millions of refugees were subsequently deported, and returned to a country in which they had little-to-no ability to earn a livelihood, which was only further complicated due to the lack of resources in comparison to the number of individuals being repatriated.[20]

UNHCR repatriation edit

 
Afghan citizens returning from Pakistan in 2004

Since 2002, the UNHCR has repatriated 4,388,058 Afghan refugees from Pakistan to Afghanistan.[10]

In 2005 the government of Pakistan began registering all Afghans, and the number of registered Afghans was reported at 2.15 million in February 2007. They received computer-generated "proof of registration" (PoR) cards with biometric features—similar to the Pakistani Computerised National Identity Card (CNIC) but with "Afghan Citizen" on its front.[22]

More than 357,000 Afghans were repatriated from Pakistan in 2007,[23] and Afghans were repatriated between March and October of each subsequent year. Returnees were reportedly to be given land by the Afghan government to build a home,[24] and each person received a travel package worth about $100 (which was increased to $400).[25] About 80 percent of the returnees came from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 11 percent from Balochistan, 3 percent from Sindh and the remaining 4 percent from rest of the country.[26]

In June 2010 Pakistan ratified the United Nations Convention against Torture, which forbids member states from deporting, extraditing or returning people where they will be tortured. The government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has increased its efforts toward a large-scale deportation of Afghan refugees from the province.[27] The Afghan minister of refugees and repatriation announced that his ministry would establish 48 towns in Afghanistan for refugees returning from Pakistan and Iran.[28]

 
Afghan children near Islamabad, the capital of Pakistan

Between 2010 and the end of 2012, a reported 229,000 Afghan refugees returned from Pakistan.[29][30] Some Pakistani officials have estimated that 400,000 non-registered Afghans may be residing in their country.[31]

A total of 380,884 Afghan refugees left Pakistan for Afghanistan in 2016.[32] Most were born and raised in Pakistan but are still counted as citizens of Afghanistan.[5] The UNHCR reported in June 2023 that 1,333,749 registered Afghan refugees still remained in Pakistan.[10][33] As registered refugees,[2] they are permitted by law to work, rent homes, travel, and attend schools in the country. A small number of Afghans are waiting to be resettled in countries of North America, Europe, Oceania and elsewhere.

New border-crossing rules edit

A number of Afghan passport holders travel to Pakistan with a visa for a variety of reasons, including tourism, family visit, business, medical treatment, education, or sport competition. The visa, free of charge, is usually valid for three months.

Throughout history, most Afghans and Pakistanis have been crossing the border between their countries without passports or visas.[34] But in recent years this travel freedom began to be restricted. Pakistan has introduced a "visa regime for different categories of Afghan nationals."[35]

2023 expulsion edit

In 2023, the Pakistani government announced a plan to evict all illegal immigrants, including Afghan nationals, in a phased and orderly manner. This decision has led to a strong reaction from the Taliban government. The Islamabad police has finished the process of marking the locations of Afghan individuals residing in various areas of the federal capital. A survey regarding the properties of illegal Afghan nationals was also underway. The Taliban government has called Pakistan’s decision to expel Afghans living in the country without approval ‘unacceptable’. They have raised alarms for the Pakistani government to “reconsider the decision“. The United Nations and human rights groups have also expressed concerns over Pakistani plans to evict illegal Afghan migrants.

Demographics edit

Most citizens of Afghanistan are found in the Pashtun-dominated areas of Pakistan, which include Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the Quetta-Chaman region of Balochistan. Smaller communities exist in Karachi, Rawalpindi, Islamabad, Lahore, and Azad Kashmir.[10]

According to Census of Afghans in Pakistan, a 2005 Pakistani Ministry of States and Frontier Regions report, the ethnic breakdown of Afghans in Pakistan was Pashtuns (81.5 percent), Tajiks (7.3 percent), Uzbeks (2.3 percent), Hazara (1.3 percent), Turkmen (2.0 percent), Baloch (1.7 percent) and others (3.9 percent).[36]

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa hosts the largest population of Afghan citizens with 52.6%, followed by Balochistan (24.1%), Punjab (14.3%), Sindh (5.5%), Islamabad (3.1%), and Azad Kashmir (0.3%).[10][33]

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa edit

According to latest UNHCR report, around 701,358 registered citizens of Afghanistan reside in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.[10] During the 1980s Soviet–Afghan War, Peshawar was a center for Afghan refugees. The Jalozai refugee camp alone had over 100,000 residents in 1988. Peshawar assimilated many Afghans with relative ease,[37] and the city became home to many Afghan musicians and artists.

Balochistan edit

About 321,677 Afghan citizens reside in Balochistan.[10] After Peshawar, Quetta has the second-highest percentage of Afghan refugees. Most Afghans in Quetta are engaged in business and work in the city.[38] A 2005 census of Afghans in Balochistan indicated that the overwhelming majority were Pashtun, followed by Uzbeks, Tajiks, Baluchis, Hazaras and Turkmen.[38] Quetta has the largest concentration of Hazara people outside Afghanistan, based in areas such as Hazara Town. Due to social unrest and Hazara persecution, the Afghan refugees are trying to resettle in other countries such as Australia, the United Kingdom, Finland, Canada, etc.[39]

The first wave of Afghan Hazaras arrived during the 1980s Soviet war, and more arrived fleeing persecution by the Taliban regime in the 1990s. They forged closer links with their Pakistani Hazara patrons, whose ancestors had arrived during Amir Abdur Rahman Khan's reign in the late 1800s; these Pakistani Hazaras have some influence in the Balochistan government. Instead of living in settlement camps, many Hazaras have settled in cities.[38]

Punjab edit

The province of Punjab has roughly 191,053 citizens of Afghanistan.[10][40] In June 2007, the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) registered 16,439 Afghans in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore;[41] their number was reported at about 7,000 in October 2004.[42]

Sindh edit

Sindh has a total of 73,789 registered citizens of Afghanistan.[10] In 2009, their number was approximately 50,000.[43] A UNHCR spokesman said, "Sindh is home to some 50,000 Afghan refugees and most of them are staying in Karachi".[43] "The police can move only against unregistered Afghans, whose number is very small in Karachi", said a senior Karachi police official.[43]

Islamabad Capital Territory edit

Approximately 41,520 registered Afghan citizens reside in Islamabad.[10] Before 2006 about 25,000 lived in a refugee camp in the Islamabad Capital Territory. The camp was closed, its refugees relocated and 7,335 Afghans were reportedly living in Rawalpindi.[44] In 2009, it was reported that the UNHCR helped about 3,000 refugees move from the slums of Islamabad to an undeveloped plot of land in a green belt on the edge of the city.[45]

Azad Jammu and Kashmir edit

Azad Kashmir has 4,352 Afghans and Gilgit-Baltistan merely 5. During the 1980s, about 13,000 Afghans migrated to cities in Azad Kashmir.[46] According to a 2011 article in The News International, Afghans and other foreigners in Azad Kashmir were perceived as a security risk.[47] In 2015, there were 11,000 unregistered Afghan refugees in Azad Kashmir who faced possible expulsion or deportation.[48]

Society edit

 
Aryan Khan, a TV personality in Afghanistan, lived in Pakistan.

Relationship with Pakistani society edit

Due to historical, ethnic, religious, and linguistic connections, Afghan immigrants in Pakistan find it relatively easy to adapt to local customs and culture. There are few obstacles to transition and assimilation into mainstream society; culture shock for Afghan Pashtuns is relatively small in parts of northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the northern parts of Balochistan. In 1997-2001, Pakistan was very bias towards Afghan refugees that they threatened to shut down the border and forcibly return Afghan who had the right to be there under asylum.[49]

Similarly, Hazaras from Afghanistan can easily assimilate due to the presence of Hazaras in Balochistan. However, this is not the case for the Tajiks from Afghanistan. Most Afghan immigrants are fluent in Urdu, Pakistan's national language, as their second or third language.[50] Many call Pakistan their home because they were born there.[50] They participate in national festivities and other occasions, including Independence Day celebrations.[51] Afghan communities retain and preserve their cultural values, traditions and customs, despite years of fighting and difficult socioeconomic conditions in Afghanistan.[52]

As per a 2018 Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI) survey, this is how the Afghan refugees themselves have judged their host community in terms of positive or negative response, by province:[53]

Response of host community Balochistan Islamabad Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Punjab Sindh Total
Extremely welcoming 18% 39% 29% 59% 23% 27%
Welcoming 66% 52% 63% 41% 62% 61%
Unwelcoming 7% 4% 3% 0% 5% 4%
Don't know 9% 4% 5% 0% 9% 7%

Education and socioeconomic factors edit

Many Afghan refugees in Pakistan lack formal education.[54] At least 71 percent of registered Afghans had no formal education, and only 20 percent were in the labour market. Despite economic hardships and challenges in Pakistan, many Afghans are unwilling to return in the near future and cite security concerns and the lack of housing and jobs in Afghanistan.[55] About 6,500 Afghans studied at Pakistani universities in 2011, with 729 exchange students receiving scholarships from the government of Pakistan.[56] A number of Afghan schools throughout Pakistan educate thousands of Afghan refugee children.[57][58] Wealthier Afghans live in cities, renting houses, driving cars and working in offices or running their own businesses; their children are enrolled in better schools and universities. Many receive remittances from family or friends living abroad; thousands of Kennedy Fried Chicken owners and workers in the eastern US transfer money every month to their extended families in Pakistan. Self-employed Afghans in Pakistan are usually involved in the Afghan rug business,[59] Afghan restaurants and bakeries (making and selling Afghan bread), international trade, auto sales or small shops. A number of Afghans are involved in Pakistani media and entertainment as television hosts, actors and news anchors. Najiba Faiz, originally from Kunduz, is popular on AVT Khyber and other stations.[60] Some Afghans drive taxicabs or sell fruit and other products, and others work in five-star hotels such as the Serena and the Marriott. Many work in factories or as employees of Pakistani shop owners.[61] According to a 2007 report, Afghans were willing to work for lower wages than the average Pakistani. Afghan labour is common in transport and construction.[36]

Most Afghans did not pay taxes while living in Pakistan, an economic concern; in Peshawar, 12,000 Afghan nationals were in business without paying taxes.[62] To address these concerns, the Federal Board of Revenue implemented measures to tax Afghan traders.[63]

Cricket edit

 
Rashid Khan of the Afghanistan national cricket team lived in Pakistan.

Cricket in Afghanistan was popularised by Afghan expatriates who learnt the sport while living in Pakistan in the 1980s and 1990s, during the post-Soviet invasion era.[64][65] Most members of the early Afghanistan national cricket team grew up in Pakistan and participated in the country's domestic cricket structure, making use of cricket facilities in Peshawar with the support of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB).[66][67] It was during this time that the Afghanistan Cricket Federation (now ACB) was also founded, in 1995.[68] The ACF received recognition from the International Cricket Council (ICC) in 2001.[68]

Several future cricketers representing Afghanistan emerged from Peshawar's club cricket scene, establishing an Afghan cricket club to compete against other local Pakistani sides in the 1990s.[68]

The Afghanistan national team was coached by former Pakistani cricketers Kabir Khan and Rashid Latif in its initial years.[69][66] During this period, a number of Afghan international cricketers made appearances for Pakistani domestic outfits in the first-class circuit.[70][71][72]

Afghan cricket teams such as the Afghan Cheetahs frequently participate in domestic Pakistani tournaments.

Health edit

Afghan refugees in Pakistan are looked upon and helped by the UNHCR, UNICEF, the World Health Organization (WHO), USAID and other aid agencies.[73] Most refugees live on the outskirts of the cities in Pakistan due to cheaper costs of living. They also have limited access to health care facilities, making them more at risk of various infections and diseases. Also, movement of people from one place to another serves as a source of dispersal of infections to new areas.[74]

Communicable and noncommunicable diseases edit

When refugees transit from non-endemic region to an endemic region, they are more susceptible to local diseases as compared to indigenous population, as they are not immune to native strains. The communicable and non-communicable disease burden is double on Pakistan as it is presently passing through an epidemiological transition.[75] According to the Commissionerate Afghan Refugees (CAR), Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK), most of the deaths amongst the Afghan refugees occur due to cardiovascular problems.Risk of various health conditions, like cardiovascular diseases and diabetes, is expected to be more among refugees due to starvation.[76]

The total rate of cardiac patients is 6.67/1000. Stress is an important risk factor as migration involves the breaking of relation with family, friends, culture and social interactions.[74] Most prevalent infections in the refugee population in Pakistan are the respiratory tract infections (48.05%). Whereas, skin diseases and diarrhea collectively affect 21.08% of the Afghan refugees.[74]

CAUSES OF MORTALITY 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Respiratory Diseases 219 215 265 228 219
Watery Diarrhoea 15 16 44 49 6
Dysentery 73 2 13 8 9
Measles 1 1 7 3 2
Cardiovascular Diseases 380 386 403 391 336
TB 4 2 1 3 0
Hepatitis 36 45 56 47 38
Typhoid 12 15 14 14 5
Others 831 1027 963 851 801

The table below shows the number of deaths per year due to the disease burden from the year 2012 to 2016.[77]

Maternal health edit

Maternal deaths account for a substantial burden of mortality among Afghan refugee women. Due to pregnancy or childbirth related complications, deaths of more than half million women occur every year.[78] According to the deaths record census, between January 20, 1999, and August 31, 2000, most of the women of reproductive age died due to maternal causes.[79]

Indicator Afghan refugees, (rate [95% CI])
Maternal mortality ratio (per 100000 livebirths) 291 (181–400)
Lifetime risk of maternal death 1 in 50 (36–81)
Neonatal mortality rate (per 1000 livebirths) 25 (22–28)
Infant mortality rate (per 1000 livebirths) 42 (38–46)
Total stillbirth rate (per 100 live and stillbirths) 1·6 (1·4–1·9)
Crude birth rate (per 1000 population) 43 (42–44)
General fertility rate (per 1000 women age 15–49 years) 195 (191–199)

1/([maternal deaths/women aged 15–49])[79]

Tuberculosis edit

Pakistan is amongst the top five countries having high rate of tuberculosis (TB).[80] In 2011, the National Tuberculosis Control Programme (NTP) achieved 64% detection rate for tuberculosis cases in Pakistan.[81] In Afghan refugees a total of 541 new TB cases were reported during years 2012–2015, however, no case has been reported between 2016 and 2018.[74]

Malaria edit

Various parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa are malarial endemic regions.[82] Malarial control remains challenging as it develops resistance against insecticides and antimalarials in use. Migration of 3 million afghan refugees to Pakistan was vulnerable because they settled in malaria endemic regions.[82] A total of 10710 malarial cases were reported from the year 2012 to 2018, with a total of 3 deaths from malaria. P. Vivax was most prevalent in the reported cases. Surprisingly, only three malaria-related deaths were reported in the 7 years span, although the number of positive cases was quite high. This may be because of underreporting of deaths caused by malaria and the actual number could be high.[82]

Polio edit

The global drive to eliminate polio, which has gone on for 31 years and consumed over $16 billion, has been set back again by the new reported cases in Pakistan and Afghanistan. In 2019 there were a total of 42 polio paralysis cases in the two countries.[83] Pakistan and Afghanistan form a single epidemiological block with a regular cross-border movement, which maintains the flow of the poliovirus in both directions of the border. The movement of people crossing the border has largely been unchecked or uncontrolled. In 2015, most reported cases of polio in Afghanistan were from Nangarhar province, which borders Pakistan, and were genetically linked to cases in Pakistan. All cases of polio in these border areas are reported in the mobile population, especially the returning displaced population.[84] Among Afghan refugees in Pakistan, only one case of polio was reported in June 2016. The percentage coverage of immunization in children among Afghan refugees was 100% from 2012 to 2018. It was only possible due to the efforts of Pakistan Government immunization program.[85]

Mental health edit

Large number of Afghans are suffering from mental illness. The commonest among these are: depression, anxiety, adjustment disorder, psychosomatic disorder and PTSD. Prevalence of mental issues among refugee children has also been reported. Most common presentations in the local clinic are medically unexplained aches and pains.[86] Observed rate of psychological disturbances in Afghan refugees is equivalent to 0.22 per 1,000 persons.[74]

Legal issues edit

Persecution and discrimination edit

Afghans living in Pakistan are vulnerable to torture, persecution and mistreatment.[87] They have often been targeted by Pakistani authorities.[88] After the 2014 Peshawar school massacre by members of Tehrik-i-Taliban, the militants, all of whom were foreign nationals, comprising one Chechen, three Arabs and two Afghans, the government of Pakistan decided to deport tens of thousands of Afghan refugees.[87][89] The strain on relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan and Afghanistan's relations with India have also contributed to anti-Afghan sentiment.[90]

Pakistanis claim that the influx of Afghan refugees since the 1980s has contributed to increased sectarian violence, drug trafficking, terrorism and organised crime in Pakistan.[91][92][93] According to the Pakistan Citizenship Act 1951, people who migrated to Pakistan before 18 April 1951 (and their descendants) are Pakistani citizens. Although the act was directed at Muhajir settlers who arrived in Pakistan following the partition of India in 1947, it generally included all migrant groups (including Afghans).[94] Those who immigrated after this date are required to apply for Pakistani citizenship and identity documents. It is estimated that over 200,000 Afghans who arrived after 1951 have obtained Pakistani citizenship and identity documents, such as Computerized National Identity Cards (CNICs), without formal applications.[95] In 2015, Pakistani authorities pledged to invalidate the documents, making older Afghans illegal immigrants.[95][96][97][98][99] National Database and Registration Authority and passport officials, union councils and political activists were found to have created fake identities and sell Pakistani national identity cards to Afghan migrants.[100]

Thousands of Afghans were reported in Pakistani jails in May 2011, most of whom were arrested for offenses ranging from petty crimes to not having a proof of registration (PoR) card, Pakistani visa or Afghan passport.[34][101] In 2007, 337 Afghan nationals "were arrested for illegally travelling to Saudi Arabia to perform Hajj on fake Pakistani passports. After serving prison sentences and paying fines, they were released on "the condition they will not enter Pakistan illegally again."[102] In 2012, 278 Afghan nationals were arrested by intelligence agencies for possessing fake Pakistani CNICs. According to the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Home and Tribal Affairs Department, "A number of Afghan refugees (have) managed to obtain fake CNICs from different National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) offices, especially from Zhob, Loralai, Bhakkar, Muzafargarh, Thatta and Dera Ismail Khan".[103] Khyber Pakhtunkhwa officials said that action would be taken against the Afghans and the Pakistanis who were involved in the fraud. "We have issued instructions to NADRA to start screening all the CNICs issued, which would help identify fake CNICs", a department official said.[103]

Several Afghans were arrested by the Federal Investigation Agency at a passport office in Lahore involved in issuing fraudulent Pakistani CNICs and passports. According to sources, Afghan immigrants could pay as much as Rs150,000 to Rs200,000 to obtain Pakistani nationality documents.[104]

Issuing CNICs to the remaining registered Afghan nationals residing in Pakistan, many of which were born inside Pakistan, has been debated. Several Pakistani politicians objected to the idea; one said, "They have overstayed their welcome, scattered across our cities and taken up our jobs".[105] The Pakistan Falah Party led a July 2016 protest against Afghan nationals in Haripur.[106]

Smuggling edit

 
US Army soldiers intercept illegal lumber smuggled through Kunar Province in Afghanistan into neighboring Pakistan.

Smuggling became a major business after the establishment of the Durand Line in 1893, which is now controlled by a large organized-crime network on both sides of the border. Major items smuggled from Afghanistan into Pakistan have been opium, hashish, heroin, lumber,[107] precious stones, copper, automobiles and electronics.

The drugs trade and opium production in Afghanistan have taken a toll on Pakistan.[108] According to a 2001 report, the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (the Taliban government) have been unable to stop the refining and export of heroin stockpiles through its borders. The immediate result has been the extensive smuggling of drugs into Pakistan.[109]

Terrorism edit

According to Sheikh Rasheed Ahmad, "families of Afghanistan's Taliban reside in his country, including in areas around the capital, Islamabad, and the insurgent group's members receive some medical treatment in local hospitals."[110] Former Foreign Minister of Pakistan, Hina Rabbani Khar, claimed in 2011 that the Taliban residing in Pakistan had assassinated Burhanuddin Rabbani in Kabul, Afghanistan.[111][112]

"What the Taliban are doing or are not doing has nothing to do with us. We are neither responsible, nor the spokesperson for the Taliban."[113]

— Imran Khan, July 2021

Afghan militants sometimes enter Pakistan's border regions for shelter. Due to Pakistan's porous border with Afghanistan, it is difficult for local authorities and security agencies to track the movement of Afghan militants into the country. In 2003, 246 Taliban were arrested in a Quetta hospital after they were wounded in Afghanistan: "Forty-seven of the arrested Afghani elements have been handed over to the Afghan government, while the remaining detainees are being investigated by the security apparatus".[114] After the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in the late 1970s, Pakistan's government under Zia-ul-Haq (in conjunction with the United States and Saudi Arabia) supported Afghan mujahideen forces with weapons to fight the Soviet-backed Afghan government. Operation Cyclone is regarded as contributing to the start of militant activities in Pakistan's tribal areas.[115]

In the past, American drone attacks in Pakistan often targeted members of militant groups (the Haqqani network, Hezb-e-Islami, the Taliban, al-Qaida, Chechens, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and East Turkestan Islamic Movement amongst others) hiding in Pakistan's bordering tribal areas, near Afghan refugee camps. Several Afghan refugees have been charged by Pakistani authorities with terrorism-related activities in Pakistan. The 2009 Lahore police academy attacks, blamed on the Pakistani militant groups (Fedayeen al-Islam and Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan), involved one Afghan who received a 10-year sentence.[116] In the 2011 Dera Ghazi Khan bombings, a teenaged Afghan boy (Fida Hussain) from the tribal areas was arrested as a suspect.[117] A group of militants was involved in the 2015 Camp Badaber attack.[118] Several Afghans have been captured while attempting to recruit and smuggle people for militancy in Afghanistan.[119] Rehman Malik, the former interior minister of Pakistan has commented this about Afghan refugees:

Pakistan has long sheltered Afghan refugees [but they are now acting] against Pakistan. (Afghan) nationals will not be allowed to carry out criminal activities (here). There will be complete restriction on the movement of Afghan refugees in Balochistan and KP. We have given a one-month deadline to illegal immigrants to get their refugee cards. Otherwise, they will be arrested.[120]

— Rehman Malik, September 2011

After the December 2014 Peshawar school massacre, Pakistani authorities cracked down on Afghan refugee settlements to apprehend illegal immigrants. At least 30,000 Afghans left for Afghanistan, of whom nearly 2,000 were forecully sent there due to a lack of legal documentation.[121] In February 2015, over 1,000 Afghans per day were reportedly returning to Afghanistan at Torkham Crossing.[89] By September 2015, over 137,000 Afghans had returned to Afghanistan.[122]

Notable past residents edit

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • "Spotlight on Afghan refugees in Pakistan". Kiran Brulliard. The Washington Post.
  • "Afghans travel on fake Pakistani passports". Bureau report. Dawn News. 9 April 2003.

References edit

  1. ^ "Afghanistan situation". United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
  2. ^ a b "Government delivered first new Proof of Registration smartcards to Afghan refugees". Unhcr Pakistan. May 25, 2021. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  3. ^ "75,000 Afghan refugee families impacted by COVID-19 received emergency cash". ReliefWeb. 29 Jan 2021. Retrieved 2021-07-30.
  4. ^ "Asylum system in Pakistan". UNHCR. Retrieved 2021-07-30.
  5. ^ a b "Government, UNHCR verify 1.3 million Afghan refugees in Pakistan". June 3, 2022. Retrieved 2022-07-26.
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External links edit

  • Official website of the UNHCR – Pakistan
  • "Gang Arrested for Sending Afghans Abroad on Fake Pakistani Passports". Asma Sajid. Pro Pakistani.

afghans, pakistan, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, inline, citations, statements, consisting, only, original, research, should, removed, june, 2016, learn, when, remove, this, template, m. This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed June 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Afghans in Pakistan Urdu افغان مهاجرين Afghan muhajirin lit Afghan migrants are temporary residents from Afghanistan who are registered in Pakistan as refugees and asylum seekers 2 They fall under the jurisdiction of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees UNHCR 3 4 Most of them were born and raised in Pakistan during the last four decades 5 Additionally there are also Special Immigrant Visa applicants awaiting to immmigrate to the United States 6 7 8 9 Afghans in Pakistanافغان مهاجرينTotal populationc 4 4 million 2023 1 LanguagesNative Pashto Dari HazaragiAdditional Urdu EnglishReligionIslam Sunni majority Shia minority The Pakistani government began admitting Afghans after the beginning of the Soviet Afghan War in 1979 by the end of 2001 there were over four million of them on the Pakistani side 10 11 12 About 75 of them have returned to their native country of Afghanistan since 2002 As of October 2023 update the United Nations estimates that nearly 3 7 million Afghans reside in Pakistan while Pakistani authorities believe the number to be as high as 4 4 million 13 14 15 Of these only a few hold the required documentation allowing them to legally stay in Pakistan 13 As of June 2023 update approximately 1 333 749 registered refugees still remain in Pakistan according to UNHCR 10 On 3 October 2023 the Interior Minister of Pakistan Sarfraz Bugti ordered that all undocumented immigrants mainly nearly 1 73 million Afghan nationals to voluntarily leave the country by 1 November 2023 or face deportation in a crackdown 16 Contents 1 History and migration 1 1 UNHCR repatriation 1 2 New border crossing rules 1 3 2023 expulsion 2 Demographics 2 1 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 2 2 Balochistan 2 3 Punjab 2 4 Sindh 2 5 Islamabad Capital Territory 2 6 Azad Jammu and Kashmir 3 Society 3 1 Relationship with Pakistani society 3 2 Education and socioeconomic factors 3 3 Cricket 4 Health 4 1 Communicable and noncommunicable diseases 4 2 Maternal health 4 3 Tuberculosis 4 4 Malaria 4 5 Polio 4 6 Mental health 5 Legal issues 5 1 Persecution and discrimination 5 2 Smuggling 5 3 Terrorism 6 Notable past residents 7 See also 8 Further reading 9 References 10 External linksHistory and migration editFurther information Afghanistan Pakistan relations nbsp The border between Afghanistan and Pakistan is the Durand Line Most Afghan refugees in Pakistan reside in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan not very far from the Durand Line 10 Afghans have been migrating back and forth between Afghanistan and what is now Pakistan since at least the times of the Ghaznavids in the 10th century Before the mid 19th century Afghanistan was recognized as the Durrani Empire and ruled by a succession of Afghan kings with their capitals in Kandahar Kabul and Peshawar In his 1857 review of John William Kaye s The Afghan War Friedrich Engels described Afghanistan as an extensive country of Asia between Persia and the Indies and in the other direction between the Hindu Kush and the Indian Ocean It formerly included the Persian provinces of Khorassan and Kohistan together with Herat Beluchistan Cashmere and Sinde and a considerable part of the Punjab Its principal cities are Kabul the capital Ghuznee Peshawer and Kandahar 17 Interaction and migration by the region s native people were common After the Second Anglo Afghan War the late 19th century Durand Line demarcated the spheres of influence of British India s Mortimer Durand and the Afghan amir Abdur Rahman Khan The single page agreement in 1947 ending political interference beyond the frontier between Afghanistan and the British Indian Empire inherited by Pakistan in 1947 18 divided the indigenous Pashtun tribes One of the most notable periods of migration began in 1979 As the Soviet Afghan War began many Afghan citizens began to flee the country 19 The ensuing decade of violence at the hands of Soviet forces encouraged thousands more to follow escaping what some considered to be difficult if not impossible situations which included the threat of mass arrests executions attacks on public gatherings the destruction of Afghan infrastructure as well as the targeting of Afghanistan s agricultural and industrial sectors 20 In total nearly three million Afghan refugees escaped to Pakistan and about two million to Iran throughout the decade though some figures estimate that by 1990 nearly 4 5 million undocumented Afghan refugees resided throughout Pakistan 20 Aided by the UNHCR and primarily funded by the United States government Pakistan continued to accept and support the inclusion of these Afghan refugees throughout the decade In late 1988 roughly 3 3 million Afghan refugees were housed in 340 refugee camps along the Afghan Pakistan border in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa It was reported by The New York Times in November 1988 that about 100 000 refugees lived in Peshawar and more than two million lived in KP known as the North West Frontier Province at the time On the outskirts of Peshawar the Jalozai camp was one of the largest refugee camps in the NWFP According to one researcher the refugees consisted of various groups of migrants Some were individuals who came from politically prominent and wealthy families with personal and business assets outside Afghanistan a small group who arrived had assets that they could bring with them such as trucks cars and limited funds and who have done relatively well in Pakistan integrating into the new society and engaging successfully in commerce those refugees who came from the ranks of the well educated and include professionals such as doctors engineers and teachers refugees who escaped with household goods and herds of sheep cattle and yaks but for the most part must be helped to maintain themselves the fifth and the largest group constituting about 60 per cent of the refugees are ordinary Afghans who arrived with nothing and are largely dependent on Pakistan and international efforts for sustenance 21 Though through migration many Afghan refugees avoided immense violence they were still subject to political injustice and discrimination at the hands of their host country Pakistan The subsequent decade saw considerable change in regard to the attitudes and feelings toward Afghan refugees throughout Pakistan Though the nation initially welcomed these migrants utilizing terms from Islamic discourse to justify welcoming these refugees in their time of need the nation quickly turned on their subjects blaming them for a number of issues present throughout the country over the following 3 decades until the eventual repatriation from 2001 to 2009 including terrorism unemployment disease along with various other conflicts 20 This to some degree can be attributed to a dependency on U S funding which provided nearly 160 million in funds to Pakistans government in 1984 rising to nearly 630 million in 1987 20 These funds arguably persuaded Pakistans participation in housing Afghan refugees as opposed to humanitarian issues As a result Afghan refugees faced a number of inequalities including a lack of political representation In order to migrate to Pakistan Afghan refugees were required to register to one of the seven Islamic parties pre approved by the Pakistani government In doing so the Pakistani government hoped to prevent the emergence of a single political entity on behalf of the Afghan refugees and thus prevent a Palestinization of Pakistan 20 As a result the voice of Afghan migrants was largely silenced By the mid 1980s the political injustice toward Afghan refugees began to escalate to violence In 1986 a new political party began to emerge Known primarily as the Muhajir Qaumi Movement MQM though also referred to as the Refugee National Movement this party sought to gain rights for the muhajir refugees on which Pakistan had been built Yet Afghan refugees were not included in this representation and instead were made a target by the political leaders of the MQM Included in the MQM s Charter of Demands they requested the immediate placement of Afghan refugees in camps and the subsequent expropriation of their property causing a number of riots by Afghan refugees to erupt throughout Pakistan As the MQM continued to grow throughout the decade so too did the exclusion and violence toward Afghan refugees In addition to the violence the MQM created a rhetoric that largely altered the perception of Afghan refugees as they were labeled as extremist and alien to the secular Islamic state that the MQM hoped to create within Pakistan 20 This extremist rhetoric resurfaced after 9 11 and was evidence of the final shift in the attitudes held by Pakistan toward Afghan refugees Prior to 9 11 the Pakistani government had already stopped the issuing of food rations to refugee villages yet following the attacks on the World Trade center and the subsequent global focus on Afghanistan Pakistan decided to move toward the complete repatriation of Afghan refugees Claiming that these refugees were to blame for the growing security concerns within the country along with the subsequent branding of these individuals as terrorists Pakistan with support of the UNHCR began to facilitate voluntary repatriation From March to December 2002 Pakistan voluntarily repatriated nearly 1 52 million refugees and an additional 5 million over the following six years Yet there is sufficient reasoning to believe that these were not as voluntary as advertised as a joint report from the UNHCR and Pakistan suggested 82 of refugees reported to not wish to repatriate 20 Regardless millions of refugees were subsequently deported and returned to a country in which they had little to no ability to earn a livelihood which was only further complicated due to the lack of resources in comparison to the number of individuals being repatriated 20 UNHCR repatriation edit Further information Afghan identity card nbsp Afghan citizens returning from Pakistan in 2004Since 2002 the UNHCR has repatriated 4 388 058 Afghan refugees from Pakistan to Afghanistan 10 In 2005 the government of Pakistan began registering all Afghans and the number of registered Afghans was reported at 2 15 million in February 2007 They received computer generated proof of registration PoR cards with biometric features similar to the Pakistani Computerised National Identity Card CNIC but with Afghan Citizen on its front 22 More than 357 000 Afghans were repatriated from Pakistan in 2007 23 and Afghans were repatriated between March and October of each subsequent year Returnees were reportedly to be given land by the Afghan government to build a home 24 and each person received a travel package worth about 100 which was increased to 400 25 About 80 percent of the returnees came from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 11 percent from Balochistan 3 percent from Sindh and the remaining 4 percent from rest of the country 26 In June 2010 Pakistan ratified the United Nations Convention against Torture which forbids member states from deporting extraditing or returning people where they will be tortured The government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has increased its efforts toward a large scale deportation of Afghan refugees from the province 27 The Afghan minister of refugees and repatriation announced that his ministry would establish 48 towns in Afghanistan for refugees returning from Pakistan and Iran 28 nbsp Afghan children near Islamabad the capital of PakistanBetween 2010 and the end of 2012 a reported 229 000 Afghan refugees returned from Pakistan 29 30 Some Pakistani officials have estimated that 400 000 non registered Afghans may be residing in their country 31 A total of 380 884 Afghan refugees left Pakistan for Afghanistan in 2016 32 Most were born and raised in Pakistan but are still counted as citizens of Afghanistan 5 The UNHCR reported in June 2023 that 1 333 749 registered Afghan refugees still remained in Pakistan 10 33 As registered refugees 2 they are permitted by law to work rent homes travel and attend schools in the country A small number of Afghans are waiting to be resettled in countries of North America Europe Oceania and elsewhere New border crossing rules edit A number of Afghan passport holders travel to Pakistan with a visa for a variety of reasons including tourism family visit business medical treatment education or sport competition The visa free of charge is usually valid for three months Throughout history most Afghans and Pakistanis have been crossing the border between their countries without passports or visas 34 But in recent years this travel freedom began to be restricted Pakistan has introduced a visa regime for different categories of Afghan nationals 35 2023 expulsion edit Main article Expulsion of Afghans from Pakistan In 2023 the Pakistani government announced a plan to evict all illegal immigrants including Afghan nationals in a phased and orderly manner This decision has led to a strong reaction from the Taliban government The Islamabad police has finished the process of marking the locations of Afghan individuals residing in various areas of the federal capital A survey regarding the properties of illegal Afghan nationals was also underway The Taliban government has called Pakistan s decision to expel Afghans living in the country without approval unacceptable They have raised alarms for the Pakistani government to reconsider the decision The United Nations and human rights groups have also expressed concerns over Pakistani plans to evict illegal Afghan migrants Demographics editSee also Tajiks in Pakistan Turkmen in Pakistan and Uzbeks in Pakistan Most citizens of Afghanistan are found in the Pashtun dominated areas of Pakistan which include Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the Quetta Chaman region of Balochistan Smaller communities exist in Karachi Rawalpindi Islamabad Lahore and Azad Kashmir 10 According to Census of Afghans in Pakistan a 2005 Pakistani Ministry of States and Frontier Regions report the ethnic breakdown of Afghans in Pakistan was Pashtuns 81 5 percent Tajiks 7 3 percent Uzbeks 2 3 percent Hazara 1 3 percent Turkmen 2 0 percent Baloch 1 7 percent and others 3 9 percent 36 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa hosts the largest population of Afghan citizens with 52 6 followed by Balochistan 24 1 Punjab 14 3 Sindh 5 5 Islamabad 3 1 and Azad Kashmir 0 3 10 33 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa edit According to latest UNHCR report around 701 358 registered citizens of Afghanistan reside in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 10 During the 1980s Soviet Afghan War Peshawar was a center for Afghan refugees The Jalozai refugee camp alone had over 100 000 residents in 1988 Peshawar assimilated many Afghans with relative ease 37 and the city became home to many Afghan musicians and artists Balochistan edit Further information Quetta Shura About 321 677 Afghan citizens reside in Balochistan 10 After Peshawar Quetta has the second highest percentage of Afghan refugees Most Afghans in Quetta are engaged in business and work in the city 38 A 2005 census of Afghans in Balochistan indicated that the overwhelming majority were Pashtun followed by Uzbeks Tajiks Baluchis Hazaras and Turkmen 38 Quetta has the largest concentration of Hazara people outside Afghanistan based in areas such as Hazara Town Due to social unrest and Hazara persecution the Afghan refugees are trying to resettle in other countries such as Australia the United Kingdom Finland Canada etc 39 The first wave of Afghan Hazaras arrived during the 1980s Soviet war and more arrived fleeing persecution by the Taliban regime in the 1990s They forged closer links with their Pakistani Hazara patrons whose ancestors had arrived during Amir Abdur Rahman Khan s reign in the late 1800s these Pakistani Hazaras have some influence in the Balochistan government Instead of living in settlement camps many Hazaras have settled in cities 38 Punjab edit The province of Punjab has roughly 191 053 citizens of Afghanistan 10 40 In June 2007 the National Database and Registration Authority NADRA registered 16 439 Afghans in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore 41 their number was reported at about 7 000 in October 2004 42 Sindh edit Sindh has a total of 73 789 registered citizens of Afghanistan 10 In 2009 their number was approximately 50 000 43 A UNHCR spokesman said Sindh is home to some 50 000 Afghan refugees and most of them are staying in Karachi 43 The police can move only against unregistered Afghans whose number is very small in Karachi said a senior Karachi police official 43 Islamabad Capital Territory edit Approximately 41 520 registered Afghan citizens reside in Islamabad 10 Before 2006 about 25 000 lived in a refugee camp in the Islamabad Capital Territory The camp was closed its refugees relocated and 7 335 Afghans were reportedly living in Rawalpindi 44 In 2009 it was reported that the UNHCR helped about 3 000 refugees move from the slums of Islamabad to an undeveloped plot of land in a green belt on the edge of the city 45 Azad Jammu and Kashmir edit Azad Kashmir has 4 352 Afghans and Gilgit Baltistan merely 5 During the 1980s about 13 000 Afghans migrated to cities in Azad Kashmir 46 According to a 2011 article in The News International Afghans and other foreigners in Azad Kashmir were perceived as a security risk 47 In 2015 there were 11 000 unregistered Afghan refugees in Azad Kashmir who faced possible expulsion or deportation 48 Society edit nbsp Aryan Khan a TV personality in Afghanistan lived in Pakistan Relationship with Pakistani society edit Further information Culture of Pakistan and Culture of Afghanistan Due to historical ethnic religious and linguistic connections Afghan immigrants in Pakistan find it relatively easy to adapt to local customs and culture There are few obstacles to transition and assimilation into mainstream society culture shock for Afghan Pashtuns is relatively small in parts of northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the northern parts of Balochistan In 1997 2001 Pakistan was very bias towards Afghan refugees that they threatened to shut down the border and forcibly return Afghan who had the right to be there under asylum 49 Similarly Hazaras from Afghanistan can easily assimilate due to the presence of Hazaras in Balochistan However this is not the case for the Tajiks from Afghanistan Most Afghan immigrants are fluent in Urdu Pakistan s national language as their second or third language 50 Many call Pakistan their home because they were born there 50 They participate in national festivities and other occasions including Independence Day celebrations 51 Afghan communities retain and preserve their cultural values traditions and customs despite years of fighting and difficult socioeconomic conditions in Afghanistan 52 As per a 2018 Sustainable Development Policy Institute SDPI survey this is how the Afghan refugees themselves have judged their host community in terms of positive or negative response by province 53 Response of host community Balochistan Islamabad Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Punjab Sindh TotalExtremely welcoming 18 39 29 59 23 27 Welcoming 66 52 63 41 62 61 Unwelcoming 7 4 3 0 5 4 Don t know 9 4 5 0 9 7 Education and socioeconomic factors edit Further information Education in Pakistan and Education in Afghanistan Many Afghan refugees in Pakistan lack formal education 54 At least 71 percent of registered Afghans had no formal education and only 20 percent were in the labour market Despite economic hardships and challenges in Pakistan many Afghans are unwilling to return in the near future and cite security concerns and the lack of housing and jobs in Afghanistan 55 About 6 500 Afghans studied at Pakistani universities in 2011 with 729 exchange students receiving scholarships from the government of Pakistan 56 A number of Afghan schools throughout Pakistan educate thousands of Afghan refugee children 57 58 Wealthier Afghans live in cities renting houses driving cars and working in offices or running their own businesses their children are enrolled in better schools and universities Many receive remittances from family or friends living abroad thousands of Kennedy Fried Chicken owners and workers in the eastern US transfer money every month to their extended families in Pakistan Self employed Afghans in Pakistan are usually involved in the Afghan rug business 59 Afghan restaurants and bakeries making and selling Afghan bread international trade auto sales or small shops A number of Afghans are involved in Pakistani media and entertainment as television hosts actors and news anchors Najiba Faiz originally from Kunduz is popular on AVT Khyber and other stations 60 Some Afghans drive taxicabs or sell fruit and other products and others work in five star hotels such as the Serena and the Marriott Many work in factories or as employees of Pakistani shop owners 61 According to a 2007 report Afghans were willing to work for lower wages than the average Pakistani Afghan labour is common in transport and construction 36 Most Afghans did not pay taxes while living in Pakistan an economic concern in Peshawar 12 000 Afghan nationals were in business without paying taxes 62 To address these concerns the Federal Board of Revenue implemented measures to tax Afghan traders 63 Cricket edit See also Afghanistan Pakistan sports rivalries nbsp Rashid Khan of the Afghanistan national cricket team lived in Pakistan Cricket in Afghanistan was popularised by Afghan expatriates who learnt the sport while living in Pakistan in the 1980s and 1990s during the post Soviet invasion era 64 65 Most members of the early Afghanistan national cricket team grew up in Pakistan and participated in the country s domestic cricket structure making use of cricket facilities in Peshawar with the support of the Pakistan Cricket Board PCB 66 67 It was during this time that the Afghanistan Cricket Federation now ACB was also founded in 1995 68 The ACF received recognition from the International Cricket Council ICC in 2001 68 Several future cricketers representing Afghanistan emerged from Peshawar s club cricket scene establishing an Afghan cricket club to compete against other local Pakistani sides in the 1990s 68 The Afghanistan national team was coached by former Pakistani cricketers Kabir Khan and Rashid Latif in its initial years 69 66 During this period a number of Afghan international cricketers made appearances for Pakistani domestic outfits in the first class circuit 70 71 72 Afghan cricket teams such as the Afghan Cheetahs frequently participate in domestic Pakistani tournaments Health editFurther information Health in Pakistan and Health in Afghanistan Afghan refugees in Pakistan are looked upon and helped by the UNHCR UNICEF the World Health Organization WHO USAID and other aid agencies 73 Most refugees live on the outskirts of the cities in Pakistan due to cheaper costs of living They also have limited access to health care facilities making them more at risk of various infections and diseases Also movement of people from one place to another serves as a source of dispersal of infections to new areas 74 Communicable and noncommunicable diseases edit When refugees transit from non endemic region to an endemic region they are more susceptible to local diseases as compared to indigenous population as they are not immune to native strains The communicable and non communicable disease burden is double on Pakistan as it is presently passing through an epidemiological transition 75 According to the Commissionerate Afghan Refugees CAR Khyber Pakhtunkhwa KPK most of the deaths amongst the Afghan refugees occur due to cardiovascular problems Risk of various health conditions like cardiovascular diseases and diabetes is expected to be more among refugees due to starvation 76 The total rate of cardiac patients is 6 67 1000 Stress is an important risk factor as migration involves the breaking of relation with family friends culture and social interactions 74 Most prevalent infections in the refugee population in Pakistan are the respiratory tract infections 48 05 Whereas skin diseases and diarrhea collectively affect 21 08 of the Afghan refugees 74 CAUSES OF MORTALITY 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016Respiratory Diseases 219 215 265 228 219Watery Diarrhoea 15 16 44 49 6Dysentery 73 2 13 8 9Measles 1 1 7 3 2Cardiovascular Diseases 380 386 403 391 336TB 4 2 1 3 0Hepatitis 36 45 56 47 38Typhoid 12 15 14 14 5Others 831 1027 963 851 801The table below shows the number of deaths per year due to the disease burden from the year 2012 to 2016 77 Maternal health edit Maternal deaths account for a substantial burden of mortality among Afghan refugee women Due to pregnancy or childbirth related complications deaths of more than half million women occur every year 78 According to the deaths record census between January 20 1999 and August 31 2000 most of the women of reproductive age died due to maternal causes 79 Indicator Afghan refugees rate 95 CI Maternal mortality ratio per 100000 livebirths 291 181 400 Lifetime risk of maternal death 1 in 50 36 81 Neonatal mortality rate per 1000 livebirths 25 22 28 Infant mortality rate per 1000 livebirths 42 38 46 Total stillbirth rate per 100 live and stillbirths 1 6 1 4 1 9 Crude birth rate per 1000 population 43 42 44 General fertility rate per 1000 women age 15 49 years 195 191 199 1 maternal deaths women aged 15 49 79 Tuberculosis edit Pakistan is amongst the top five countries having high rate of tuberculosis TB 80 In 2011 the National Tuberculosis Control Programme NTP achieved 64 detection rate for tuberculosis cases in Pakistan 81 In Afghan refugees a total of 541 new TB cases were reported during years 2012 2015 however no case has been reported between 2016 and 2018 74 Malaria edit Various parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa are malarial endemic regions 82 Malarial control remains challenging as it develops resistance against insecticides and antimalarials in use Migration of 3 million afghan refugees to Pakistan was vulnerable because they settled in malaria endemic regions 82 A total of 10710 malarial cases were reported from the year 2012 to 2018 with a total of 3 deaths from malaria P Vivax was most prevalent in the reported cases Surprisingly only three malaria related deaths were reported in the 7 years span although the number of positive cases was quite high This may be because of underreporting of deaths caused by malaria and the actual number could be high 82 Polio edit The global drive to eliminate polio which has gone on for 31 years and consumed over 16 billion has been set back again by the new reported cases in Pakistan and Afghanistan In 2019 there were a total of 42 polio paralysis cases in the two countries 83 Pakistan and Afghanistan form a single epidemiological block with a regular cross border movement which maintains the flow of the poliovirus in both directions of the border The movement of people crossing the border has largely been unchecked or uncontrolled In 2015 most reported cases of polio in Afghanistan were from Nangarhar province which borders Pakistan and were genetically linked to cases in Pakistan All cases of polio in these border areas are reported in the mobile population especially the returning displaced population 84 Among Afghan refugees in Pakistan only one case of polio was reported in June 2016 The percentage coverage of immunization in children among Afghan refugees was 100 from 2012 to 2018 It was only possible due to the efforts of Pakistan Government immunization program 85 Mental health edit Large number of Afghans are suffering from mental illness The commonest among these are depression anxiety adjustment disorder psychosomatic disorder and PTSD Prevalence of mental issues among refugee children has also been reported Most common presentations in the local clinic are medically unexplained aches and pains 86 Observed rate of psychological disturbances in Afghan refugees is equivalent to 0 22 per 1 000 persons 74 Legal issues editPersecution and discrimination edit Further information Persecution of Hazara people and Crime in Pakistan Afghans living in Pakistan are vulnerable to torture persecution and mistreatment 87 They have often been targeted by Pakistani authorities 88 After the 2014 Peshawar school massacre by members of Tehrik i Taliban the militants all of whom were foreign nationals comprising one Chechen three Arabs and two Afghans the government of Pakistan decided to deport tens of thousands of Afghan refugees 87 89 The strain on relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan and Afghanistan s relations with India have also contributed to anti Afghan sentiment 90 Pakistanis claim that the influx of Afghan refugees since the 1980s has contributed to increased sectarian violence drug trafficking terrorism and organised crime in Pakistan 91 92 93 According to the Pakistan Citizenship Act 1951 people who migrated to Pakistan before 18 April 1951 and their descendants are Pakistani citizens Although the act was directed at Muhajir settlers who arrived in Pakistan following the partition of India in 1947 it generally included all migrant groups including Afghans 94 Those who immigrated after this date are required to apply for Pakistani citizenship and identity documents It is estimated that over 200 000 Afghans who arrived after 1951 have obtained Pakistani citizenship and identity documents such as Computerized National Identity Cards CNICs without formal applications 95 In 2015 Pakistani authorities pledged to invalidate the documents making older Afghans illegal immigrants 95 96 97 98 99 National Database and Registration Authority and passport officials union councils and political activists were found to have created fake identities and sell Pakistani national identity cards to Afghan migrants 100 Thousands of Afghans were reported in Pakistani jails in May 2011 most of whom were arrested for offenses ranging from petty crimes to not having a proof of registration PoR card Pakistani visa or Afghan passport 34 101 In 2007 337 Afghan nationals were arrested for illegally travelling to Saudi Arabia to perform Hajj on fake Pakistani passports After serving prison sentences and paying fines they were released on the condition they will not enter Pakistan illegally again 102 In 2012 278 Afghan nationals were arrested by intelligence agencies for possessing fake Pakistani CNICs According to the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Home and Tribal Affairs Department A number of Afghan refugees have managed to obtain fake CNICs from different National Database and Registration Authority NADRA offices especially from Zhob Loralai Bhakkar Muzafargarh Thatta and Dera Ismail Khan 103 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa officials said that action would be taken against the Afghans and the Pakistanis who were involved in the fraud We have issued instructions to NADRA to start screening all the CNICs issued which would help identify fake CNICs a department official said 103 Several Afghans were arrested by the Federal Investigation Agency at a passport office in Lahore involved in issuing fraudulent Pakistani CNICs and passports According to sources Afghan immigrants could pay as much as Rs150 000 to Rs200 000 to obtain Pakistani nationality documents 104 Issuing CNICs to the remaining registered Afghan nationals residing in Pakistan many of which were born inside Pakistan has been debated Several Pakistani politicians objected to the idea one said They have overstayed their welcome scattered across our cities and taken up our jobs 105 The Pakistan Falah Party led a July 2016 protest against Afghan nationals in Haripur 106 Smuggling edit nbsp US Army soldiers intercept illegal lumber smuggled through Kunar Province in Afghanistan into neighboring Pakistan Smuggling became a major business after the establishment of the Durand Line in 1893 which is now controlled by a large organized crime network on both sides of the border Major items smuggled from Afghanistan into Pakistan have been opium hashish heroin lumber 107 precious stones copper automobiles and electronics The drugs trade and opium production in Afghanistan have taken a toll on Pakistan 108 According to a 2001 report the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan the Taliban government have been unable to stop the refining and export of heroin stockpiles through its borders The immediate result has been the extensive smuggling of drugs into Pakistan 109 Terrorism edit Further information Terrorism in Pakistan and Taliban insurgencyAccording to Sheikh Rasheed Ahmad families of Afghanistan s Taliban reside in his country including in areas around the capital Islamabad and the insurgent group s members receive some medical treatment in local hospitals 110 Former Foreign Minister of Pakistan Hina Rabbani Khar claimed in 2011 that the Taliban residing in Pakistan had assassinated Burhanuddin Rabbani in Kabul Afghanistan 111 112 What the Taliban are doing or are not doing has nothing to do with us We are neither responsible nor the spokesperson for the Taliban 113 Imran Khan July 2021Afghan militants sometimes enter Pakistan s border regions for shelter Due to Pakistan s porous border with Afghanistan it is difficult for local authorities and security agencies to track the movement of Afghan militants into the country In 2003 246 Taliban were arrested in a Quetta hospital after they were wounded in Afghanistan Forty seven of the arrested Afghani elements have been handed over to the Afghan government while the remaining detainees are being investigated by the security apparatus 114 After the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in the late 1970s Pakistan s government under Zia ul Haq in conjunction with the United States and Saudi Arabia supported Afghan mujahideen forces with weapons to fight the Soviet backed Afghan government Operation Cyclone is regarded as contributing to the start of militant activities in Pakistan s tribal areas 115 In the past American drone attacks in Pakistan often targeted members of militant groups the Haqqani network Hezb e Islami the Taliban al Qaida Chechens the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and East Turkestan Islamic Movement amongst others hiding in Pakistan s bordering tribal areas near Afghan refugee camps Several Afghan refugees have been charged by Pakistani authorities with terrorism related activities in Pakistan The 2009 Lahore police academy attacks blamed on the Pakistani militant groups Fedayeen al Islam and Tehrik i Taliban Pakistan involved one Afghan who received a 10 year sentence 116 In the 2011 Dera Ghazi Khan bombings a teenaged Afghan boy Fida Hussain from the tribal areas was arrested as a suspect 117 A group of militants was involved in the 2015 Camp Badaber attack 118 Several Afghans have been captured while attempting to recruit and smuggle people for militancy in Afghanistan 119 Rehman Malik the former interior minister of Pakistan has commented this about Afghan refugees Pakistan has long sheltered Afghan refugees but they are now acting against Pakistan Afghan nationals will not be allowed to carry out criminal activities here There will be complete restriction on the movement of Afghan refugees in Balochistan and KP We have given a one month deadline to illegal immigrants to get their refugee cards Otherwise they will be arrested 120 Rehman Malik September 2011 After the December 2014 Peshawar school massacre Pakistani authorities cracked down on Afghan refugee settlements to apprehend illegal immigrants At least 30 000 Afghans left for Afghanistan of whom nearly 2 000 were forecully sent there due to a lack of legal documentation 121 In February 2015 over 1 000 Afghans per day were reportedly returning to Afghanistan at Torkham Crossing 89 By September 2015 over 137 000 Afghans had returned to Afghanistan 122 Notable past residents editAbdul Ahad Karzai former politician in Afghanistan Afghan Girl appeared on the June 1985 cover of National Geographic Aqeela Asifi educator and winner of 2015 Nansen Refugee Award Aryana Sayeed Afghan singer Hamid Karzai politician in Afghanistan Hasti Gul cricket player Karim Sadiq cricket player Naghma Afghan singer Niloofar Rahmani former Afghan female pilot now residing in the United States Yalda Hakim Australian journalistSee also edit nbsp Afghanistan portal nbsp Pakistan portalAfghan diaspora Pakistanis in Afghanistan Afghanistan Pakistan relations Anti Afghan sentimentFurther reading edit Spotlight on Afghan refugees in Pakistan Kiran Brulliard The Washington Post Afghans travel on fake Pakistani passports Bureau report Dawn News 9 April 2003 References edit Afghanistan situation United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees a b Government delivered first new Proof of Registration smartcards to Afghan refugees Unhcr Pakistan May 25 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 28 75 000 Afghan refugee families impacted by COVID 19 received emergency cash ReliefWeb 29 Jan 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 30 Asylum system in Pakistan UNHCR Retrieved 2021 07 30 a b Government UNHCR verify 1 3 million Afghan refugees in Pakistan June 3 2022 Retrieved 2022 07 26 Welcome Home First Group of Evacuated Afghan Interpreters Arrive in US WMAQ TV July 30 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 30 The interpreters and their family members are being resettled under a visa program for those who worked with U S troops and now face retaliation from the Taliban amid America s withdrawal Afghan who aided U S arrive at Virginia base but many others remain in peril Los Angeles Times July 30 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 30 House votes to expand and speed up visa process for Afghans who helped the U S during war CNBC July 22 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 28 Joe Biden approves 300 million for Afghan refugees Khaama Press July 24 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 28 a b c d e f g h i j k l Registered Afghan Refugees in Pakistan UNHCR 30 June 2022 Retrieved 2022 11 30 Refugee Affected and Hosting Areas Programme PDF RAHA Brochure 2016 UNHCR Archived from the original PDF on February 21 2017 Retrieved February 20 2017 More than 4 4 million Afghans have sought refuge in Pakistan between 1979 2001 with over 3 2 million refugees in the country at the height of the displacement USCR Country Report Afghanistan Statistics on refugees and other uprooted people Jun 2001 ReliefWeb June 19 2001 Retrieved 2021 08 04 From 1996 to 1999 UNHCR estimated the official Afghan refugee population in Pakistan to be some 1 2 million but conceded that as many as 2 million other Afghans were probably living in Pakistan without documentation a b Pakistan issues final warning to illegal immigrants to leave voluntarily before the November 1 deadline RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty 2023 10 26 Retrieved 2023 10 31 Ahmed Munir Pakistan announces big crackdown on migrants in the country illegally including 1 7 million Afghans ABC News 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Archived from the original on January 7 2012 Retrieved 2012 01 21 a b Joseph Goldstein February 23 2015 Refugees Are Pushed to Exits in Pakistan The New York Times Retrieved February 24 2015 they all say they have been beaten and slapped and told nobody in Pakistan wants them anymore Afghan refugees in Pakistan feel heat of rising regional tensions The Express Tribune October 3 2016 Dotani Abdul Nasir 2012 The Impact of Afghan crisis on Pakistani Society since 1979 till date PDF global studies doshisha ac jp Archived from the original PDF on 2014 01 06 Retrieved 2012 01 21 Shahzada Zulfiqar ed April 24 2011 BNP rejects census in Afghan refugees presence Pakistan Today Retrieved 2012 01 21 Muralidhar Reddy ed May 13 2005 Pakistan s Afghan problem The Hindu Archived from the original on March 14 2007 Retrieved 2012 01 21 Khan Iftikhar A August 11 2016 Afghan refugees children can t get CNICs Nisar DAWN COM a b Ahmad Riaz 3 April 2015 No country for old Afghans Post 1951 immigrants to be considered illegal The Express Tribune Retrieved 4 April 2015 Nadra cancels ex senator Hamdullah s citizenship Dawn News October 27 2019 Retrieved 2021 07 30 200 000 CNICs fraudulently obtained by Afghans cancelled Dawn News January 3 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 30 Pakistan scraps 200 000 ID cards issued to Afghans Pajhwok Afghan News January 3 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 30 Pakistan cancels 200 000 fake citizen ID cards held by Afghan refugees The Hindu January 3 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 30 Revealed NADRA men helped terrorists get Pakistani identity cards The Express Tribune August 6 2015 Afghanistan Pakistan move toward prisoner exchange Pajhwok Afghan News June 16 2011 Retrieved November 12 2011 Afghans caught with fake Pak passports The Times of India March 28 2007 Archived from the original on April 26 2013 Retrieved 2012 01 21 a b Dual nationality 278 Afghans held for possessing Pak CNICs Express Tribune May 14 2012 Retrieved 16 May 2012 Passport office raided FIA arrests 11 Afghans Express Tribune 27 December 2012 Retrieved 27 December 2012 Newspaper the March 19 2011 Afghan refugees a problem for Nadra DAWN COM Extreme measures Go Afghani Go campaign launched in Haripur The Express Tribune 24 July 2016 Retrieved 25 July 2016 Action against Afghan refugees on the cards Thenews com pk June 14 2011 Retrieved 2012 01 21 Haider Ziad 2005 Sino Pakistan relations and Xinjiang s Uyghurs Politics Trade and Islam along the Karakoram Highway PDF Asian Survey 45 4 533 doi 10 1525 as 2005 45 4 522 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 05 07 Retrieved 2011 11 14 Heroin and the Taliban Opioids com 2001 10 02 Retrieved 2012 01 21 Families of Afghan Taliban Live in Pakistan Interior Minister Says Voice of America June 27 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 28 Pakistan blames Afghan refugees for Rabbani s murder The Express Tribune December 14 2011 Retrieved 2011 12 14 Policy rethink Government to redraw key pacts with US Express Tribune December 14 2011 Retrieved 14 December 2011 Most Afghan refugees support Taliban PM The Express Tribune July 29 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 30 246 Taliban arrested from hospitals within a month Pak Tribune October 3 2003 Archived from the original on December 5 2014 Retrieved June 3 2012 Bowersox Gary W 2004 The Gem Hunter The Adventures of an American in Afghanistan United States GeoVision Inc p 100 ISBN 0 9747323 1 1 Retrieved 2010 08 22 To launch this plan Bhutto recruited and trained a group of Afghans in the Bala Hesar of Peshawar in Pakistan s North west Frontier Province Among these young men were Massoud Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and other members of Jawanan e Musulman Massoud s mission to Bhutto was to create unrest in northern Afghanistan It served Massoud s interests which were apparently opposition to the Soviets and independence for Afghanistan Later after Massoud and Hekmatyar had a terrible falling out over Massoud s opposition to terrorist tactics and methods Massoud overthrew from Jawanan e Musulman He joined Rabani s newly created Afghan political party Jamiat i Islami in exile in Pakistan Manawan attack Afghan jailed for 10 years Dawn News Retrieved June 3 2012 DG Khan shrine bombing Death toll reaches 50 Express Tribune April 4 2011 Retrieved June 3 2012 PAF base attack planned in Afghanistan DG ISPR Express Tribune 18 September 2015 Retrieved 18 September 2015 Gishkori Zahid 9 April 2015 10 madrassah students arrested in Lahore before being trafficked to Kabul The Express Tribune Retrieved 9 April 2015 Taliban moving to Quetta from FATA Express Tribune September 11 2011 Retrieved September 11 2011 30 000 Afghans left Pakistan after Army Public School attack IOM Dawn 8 February 2015 Retrieved 8 February 2015 Coming home to war Afghan refugees return reluctantly from Pakistan The Express Tribune September 4 2015 External links editOfficial website of the UNHCR Pakistan Gang Arrested for Sending Afghans Abroad on Fake Pakistani Passports Asma Sajid Pro Pakistani Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Afghans in Pakistan amp oldid 1207010431, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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