Pakistan-wide raids begin to move undocumented migrants to holding centers ahead of deportation

Pakistan-wide raids begin to move undocumented migrants to holding centers ahead of deportation
Afghan nationals, who according to police were undocumented, walk as they are detained and shifted to a holding centre, after Pakistan gave the last warning to undocumented migrants to leave, in Karachi, Pakistan November 1, 2023. (Reuters)
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Updated 01 November 2023
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Pakistan-wide raids begin to move undocumented migrants to holding centers ahead of deportation

Pakistan-wide raids begin to move undocumented migrants to holding centers ahead of deportation
  • 140,322 illegal foreigners have returned voluntarily to their respective countries since Nov. 1 deadline was announced
  • Officials say raids have already started across Pakistan to identify, arrest illegal migrants who did not leave willingly

ISLAMABAD/KARACHI: Raids to round up undocumented migrants and move them to holding centers started across Pakistan on Wednesday, officials said, as a Nov. 1 deadline to leave voluntarily expired.

Pakistan last month gave foreigners without documents or registration about four weeks to leave of their own accord or face deportation. According to the interior ministry, 140,322 illegal foreigners residing in Pakistan have returned to their respective countries voluntarily since the deadline was announced on Oct. 3.

The government has set up 49 deportation centers to temporarily house illegal migrants, including an estimated 1.7 million undocumented Afghans, and said anyone found staying in the country without authorization from today, Wednesday, would be taken to one of the facilities.

Although the government insists its expulsion order does not specifically target Afghans, they form the largest number of undocumented foreigners in the South Asian nation, many of them having lived in Pakistan their entire lives. Also, since the deadline announcement, Islamabad has blamed Afghans for multiple militant attacks, including 14 of this year’s 24 suicide bombings. The government also says hosting millions of refugees has drained its resources amid an economic crisis. 

On Wednesday afternoon, officials in Karachi, Pakistan’s commercial capital, where an estimated 100,000 undocumented Afghans live, said raids were ongoing to identify those who had not left of their own will.

“Operation has started and raids are being conducted in different parts of the city,” Irfan Bahadur, Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) East Karachi, told Arab News.

“In a raid in Machhar colony a while ago, 25 people have been taken into custody who are being shifted to a holding center at MoHajjir Camp. After their screening at the camp, they will be deported.”

Later, a spokesperson of the Karachi commissioner told Arab News 100 undocumented foreigners have been brought to holding centers in the city.

Earlier in the day, police patrolled various neighborhoods where Afghans live and urged them to return voluntarily.

“All illegal immigrants should return back to their countries by 12am tonight [Thursday],” a policeman said on a loudspeaker in a video recorded by Arab News. “If they are facing any troubles or issues in this regard, or have any transport-related issues, then they should report to their nearest police stations.”

Jan Achakzai, the information minister of southwestern Balochistan, which borders Afghanistan, said at least 100 people had been arrested on Wednesday in an operation that would “continue until every last illegal immigrant is expelled from the province.”

There are an estimated 250,000 illegal migrants in Balochistan, he added.

“Law enforcement agencies have been authorized to begin detaining and transporting illegal immigrants from today to holding centers for biometric verification and subsequent deportation at the Chaman border,” Achakzai told Arab News, referring to a main border crossing in the province.

In a press conference later in the day, the minister said Pakistan had become a “haven for illegal foreign nationals” who were involved in militancy and other illicit activities.

“The time has arrived to take action against those illegal foreign nationals who haven’t heeded constant warnings,” Achakzai told reporters. “Those who are providing homes for illegal immigrants will also fall under the purview of the law.”

“HOLDING CENTRES”

Fazal-e-Rabbi, project director at the Commissionerate for Afghan Refugees in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, which borders Afghanistan and is home to the largest number of Afghan refugees, said 49 holding centers had been set up across the country for the repatriation of illegal immigrants.

“The purpose of the holding points is to screen the passengers and allow them to cross the border respectfully,” he said in a phone interview.

Three holding points had been established in KP at Peshawar, Landi Kotal, and Haripur, while eight crossing points would be used for Afghans to cross back into their home country from KP and Balochistan, which also borders Afghanistan.

He said identification and other process would be completed at holding centers, after which security personnel would escort the migrants in buses to border crossings, where they would travel into Afghanistan on the same vehicles. 

“Torkham, Kharlachi, Ghulam Khan, and Angoor Ada crossing points will be used for KP, Islamabad, Gilgit-Baltistan, and Punjab [province], and for Sindh and Balochistan [povinces], Chaman, Barab Chah, Noor Wahab, and Badini crossing points have been allocated,” Fazal-e-Rabbi said, adding that the interior ministry had set up a “control room” monitor and facilitate the process of repatriation.

“Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government has also issued a 1700 emergency number to deal with any situation,” the officer added.

Syed Mubasher, Director Public Relations for police in Punjab, said 36 holding centers had been set up in the province.

“From November 3, evacuation of illegal immigrants will be started in a phased manner across Punjab,” he told Arab News, explaining that they would be kept at holding points during the transfer process and their transport, logistics, food, and other arrangements would be the responsibility of the district administration.

“The law enforcement agencies in Punjab have chalked out a comprehensive strategy,” Inspector General of Punjab Police, Dr. Usman Anwar, said in a video statement on Wednesday. “All our raiding parties will be with cameras and will ensure through body cams and other recording mechanisms that they are not accused of human rights violations.”

In Sindh province, police official Haseebullah, who is dealing with repatriation, said two holding centers had been established in Kemari and Malir districts “to keep illegal immigrants before sending them for deportation.” 

Aslam Nasir, Public Relations Officer for Balochistan Police, said three holding centers had been established in Quetta, Chagai, and Pishin districts in the province.

“Arrangements have been finalized at four exit points for the repatriation of the illegal Afghans to their country through Balochistan province,” he said.

Achakzai, the Balochistan information minister, said two holding centers in Quetta, the provincial capital, had the capacity to accommodate 800 people.

“As of now, nearly 40,000 individuals have voluntarily returned from the Chaman border [since the announcement of the deadline] and three more points and these include also immigrants coming from Sindh province.”

Muhammad Taqi Jawad, a spokesperson for Islamabad police, told Arab News 64 illegal immigrants in police custody had already been transported to the border for repatriation.

“The process of evacuation of illegal residents has been started after the deadline and now legal action will also be taken against those who give shelter to illegal resident foreigners along with their employers,” he told Arab News.

“One holding point is established at Hajji Camp in Islamabad and a strategy is already in place to check such persons based on available information and transfer to border crossing points.”

In a video message released hours before the expiry of the deadline, Interior Minister Sarfaraz Bugti said migrants would be kept in holding centers for up to three days:

“We will try to provide them with food and health facilities and after that we will deport them through the border of our choice which will be in keeping with our security [requirements] and convenience.”

“NO PERPETUAL BAN”

On Tuesday, Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar announced there was no “perpetual ban” on the return of Afghan nationals to Pakistan.

“We have not placed a perpetual ban on them that they cannot come back to Pakistan after today,” Kakar told journalists.

“They should go to their countries, get their travel documents issued from their states, get visas from our mission there. Whether they want to come for educational purposes, for business, whatever their purpose may be, we will facilitate that.”

The government was only against “irregulated” travelers, Kakar added.

Western embassies and the United Nations have urged Pakistan to identify and protect Afghans at risk of persecution at home.

“Amnesty International strongly reiterates its call to the Government of Pakistan to immediately reverse its decision to forcibly deport unregistered Afghan refugees ahead of the deadline set for tomorrow,” the group said in a statement.

Qaisar Khan Afridi, a spokesperson for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Pakistan, said the global refugee agency had appealed to Pakistan to continue its protection of all vulnerable Afghans who sought safety in the country and could be at imminent risk if forced to return.

“Afghanistan is going through a severe humanitarian crisis with several human rights challenges — particularly for women and girls, and a series of natural disasters,” he told Arab News.

Pakistan has hosted at least four million Afghans since the 1979-1989 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, numbers that swelled after the Taliban seized power in Kabul in August 2021.

The government says those with Proof of Registration (PoR) and Afghan Citizenship Cards (ACC) would not be expelled by Nov. 1 but many Afghans have complained of harassment and arrests despite having valid documents. Authorities deny this.

“When we go to work, policemen stop us and inquire where we are from, what our purpose is, and where we are going,” said Luftullah, an Afghan who was boarding a bus from Karachi to the border on Tuesday.

“I then show them my card, the Afghan Citizen Card. After seeing it, they say it has expired. I also show them a letter from the government of Pakistan, which states that those who have Afghan [Citizen] Cards can stay in the country, but they refuse to accept it, call it a lie and then say all kinds of things.”

“TIME TO PREPARE”

As pressure mounts at border posts swarmed by thousands of returnees fleeing the threat of deportation, Afghanistan’s Taliban government urged Pakistan to give undocumented Afghans in the country more time to leave

In a statement late Tuesday, they also “asked them [Pakistan] to not forcibly deport Afghans with little notice but to give them time to prepare.”

“In countries where Afghans live, they have not threatened the security of those countries, nor have they been the cause of instability.”

Border officials on the Afghan side at the Torkham crossing in eastern Afghanistan said they were facing an “emergency situation” as they tried to keep up with waves of arrivals in their thousands.

AFP reported an ad hoc settlement had sprung up near the border post, where people were becoming increasingly desperate, sleeping outdoors with limited access to food, water and medicines as they waited for registration.

The Afghan government has established a High Commission to address the issue and said two temporary camps would be set up in the area near Torkham.


Pakistan, US agree to schedule key talks on trade and investment ‘soon’

Pakistan, US agree to schedule key talks on trade and investment ‘soon’
Updated 19 September 2024
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Pakistan, US agree to schedule key talks on trade and investment ‘soon’

Pakistan, US agree to schedule key talks on trade and investment ‘soon’
  • Trade and Investment Framework Agreement serves as platform for both countries to resolve issues related to bilateral trade
  • Commerce minister says US remains Pakistan’s” top” trading destination, calls for strengthening bilateral trade relations 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Commerce Minister Jam Kamal and US Trade Representative Katherine Tae on Thursday held talks focused on enhancing bilateral trade relations between the once close allies, with both sides agreeing to schedule the key Trade and Investment Framework Agreement (TIFA) talks “soon.”

TIFA serves as a platform for Pakistan and the US to improve market access, promote bilateral trade and investment, resolve disputes, and work on trade-related issues between the two countries. 

Pakistan and the US took part in high-level trade talks in Feb. 2023 when both countries participated in the 9th Pakistan-United States Trade and Investment Framework Agreement (TIFA) Council meeting. That meeting took place after seven years. 

Khan held a virtual meeting with Tai during which he said America remains Pakistan’s “top trading destination, expressing his country’s desire to further expand this partnership. 

“During the meeting, it was confirmed that the next Trade and Investment Framework Agreement (TIFA) meeting would be scheduled soon, along with discussions on agriculture, textiles, women’s empowerment, IT and E-commerce,” the commerce ministry said in a statement. 

Khan highlighted Pakistan’s “strong performance” in the agriculture sector, particularly in mangoes and dates, the ministry said, adding that he also spoke about the potential for growth in value-added agro-services.

Tai acknowledged Pakistan’s contributions, particularly its agricultural exports, and praised the quality of Pakistani mangoes, the statement said. 

“Minister Jam Kamal invited Tai to attend Pakistan’s TEXPO in October,” the commerce ministry said. It said Tai was grateful for the invitation and expressed interest in attending the event. 

In return, Tai invited Kamal to visit Washington to further explore trade opportunities between the two countries.


Pakistan PM says Islamabad keen to expand trade, security cooperation with Russia

Pakistan PM says Islamabad keen to expand trade, security cooperation with Russia
Updated 19 September 2024
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Pakistan PM says Islamabad keen to expand trade, security cooperation with Russia

Pakistan PM says Islamabad keen to expand trade, security cooperation with Russia
  • Visiting Russian deputy PM calls on Shehbaz Sharif in Islamabad to discuss bilateral relations 
  • Islamabad has recently sought to strengthen ties with Moscow to address its economic woes

Islamabad: Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Thursday said Islamabad was keen to expand its trade, energy, connectivity and security cooperation with Moscow during his meeting with visiting Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexei Overchuk. 

Overchuk arrived in Pakistan’s capital Islamabad on Wednesday on a two-day official visit with a high-level delegation. He has held talks with Deputy PM Ishaq Dar, Pakistan’s army chief and leading officials in Islamabad to bolster trade, investment, security and energy cooperation with Pakistan. 

Islamabad has recently sought to strengthen ties with Moscow, including requests for discounted crude oil to address its balance of payments crisis and high energy import bill, as part of a broader strategy to diversify its international partnerships and economic dependencies.

“The Prime Minister stated that Pakistan is keen to expand trade, economic, energy, connectivity and security cooperation with Russia,” the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) said in a statement. 

Sharif told Overchuk that Pakistan considers strengthening relations with Russia as an important priority of Pakistan’s foreign policy, the PMO said. 

Overchuk thanked the Pakistani premier for giving him a warm welcome and reiterated Moscow’s resolve to deepen relations with Islamabad, the PMO said. 

“He characterized Pakistan-Russia relations as constructive and mutually beneficial,” it added. 

Sharif also witnessed the signing of a memorandum of understanding between the two countries to further strengthen mutually advantageous cooperation in all areas of shared interest, especially trade, investment, energy, IT, agriculture, science & technology and education.


Pakistani blockbuster ‘The Legend of Maula Jatt’ to release in India on Oct 2

Pakistani blockbuster ‘The Legend of Maula Jatt’ to release in India on Oct 2
Updated 19 September 2024
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Pakistani blockbuster ‘The Legend of Maula Jatt’ to release in India on Oct 2

Pakistani blockbuster ‘The Legend of Maula Jatt’ to release in India on Oct 2
  • Film is a reboot of a hyper-masculine Punjabi film from four decades ago
  • Political tensions between India and Pakistan result in minimum cultural exchanges

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani blockbuster movie “The Legend of Maula Jatt” starring superstars Fawad Khan, Mahira Khan and Hamza Ali Abbasi is set to be released in Indian theaters on Oct 2, the film’s director Bilal Lashari confirmed on Wednesday. 

Released in October 2022, the movie is a reboot of a hyper-masculine Punjabi film that enchanted viewers four decades ago. It has not only won critical acclaim but also done incredibly well in domestic and international markets. 

Pakistan and India have fought three wars since gaining independence in 1947, two of them over the disputed Himalayan territory of Kashmir. Political tensions between the two nuclear-armed neighbors still dominate their relations, resulting in minimum cultural exchanges. 

“Releasing in India, Punjab on Wednesday 2nd Oct! Two years in, and still house full on weekends in Pakistan!” Lashari said in a social media post on Instagram. 

“Now, I can’t wait for our Punjabi audience in India to experience the magic of this labor of love!”

The film’s official Instagram page wrote that the official list of cinemas that would screen the movie would be revealed soon. 

Upon its release in October 2022, the film broke all previous local cinema records by grossing an impressive Rs1.5 billion – or over $6.78 million at the time – since its release in Pakistan and the rest of the world.


Speaker tells Pakistan election body to ‘honor’ parliament’s laws amid tensions with judiciary

Speaker tells Pakistan election body to ‘honor’ parliament’s laws amid tensions with judiciary
Updated 19 September 2024
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Speaker tells Pakistan election body to ‘honor’ parliament’s laws amid tensions with judiciary

Speaker tells Pakistan election body to ‘honor’ parliament’s laws amid tensions with judiciary
  • Pakistan’s top court in July ruled that ex-PM Khan’s party is entitled to reserved seats in parliament for women and minorities
  • Sharif’s government last month amended country’s election law that restricts allottment of reserved seats to ex-PM Khan’s party 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s National Assembly Speaker Sardar Ayaz Sadiq on Thursday told the country’s electoral body that amendments made to Pakistan’s election laws last month would supersede a prior ruling of the top court related to reserved seats in parliament, raising fears of a standoff with the Supreme Court. 

Sadiq’s letter to the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) came after the Supreme Court censured the election regulatory authority last week for what it said were “dilatory tactics” to avoid implementing a judgment on reserved seats for women and minorities in the national and provincial legislatures that favored the opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party. 

In a verdict on July 12, a 13-member bench of the court declared the PTI of Pakistan’s jailed former prime minister Imran Khan eligible for reserved seats after the ECP forced the party’s candidates to contest the February 8 polls as independents. After the election, the PTI-backed candidates were forced to join Sunni Ittehad Council (SIC) party to claim a share of the reserved seats as independents are not eligible for the extra seats.

The Supreme Court overturned the ECP’s decision, saying it had misconstrued an earlier verdict related to the party’s election symbol by depriving the PTI of the reserved seats. The verdict was a blow to the ruling coalition government led by Prime Minister Shehbaz, which could lose its two-thirds majority if the verdict is implemented. 

In August, Pakistan’s parliament passed the Elections (Second Amendment) Bill, 2024, which restricted granting the reserved seats in parliament to the PTI. The bill says that if a candidate does not submit a declaration of his affiliation with a political party to the returning officer before seeking the allotment of an election symbol, he or she shall be “deemed to be considered as an independent candidate and not a candidate of any political party.” 

“As the judgment of the SC was rendered based on the law prior to the enactment of the amendment, the said judgment is now incapable of implementation,” Sadiq wrote in a letter to the ECP. 

“Instead, it is the Amended Election Act that shall prevail and supersede the prior ruling.”

He pointed out that the consistent jurisprudence of the Supreme Court also held the view that the parliamentary law was superior to the court’s order. 

“It is also brought to your kind notice that the Amended Election Act is in the field, therefore, it is the statutory obligation of the ECP to honor the laws made by Parliament and uphold the principles of democracy and parliamentary supremacy,” the letter said. 

He warned that actions perceived to be undermining parliament’s sovereignty can “erode public trust and confidence in our institutions.”

CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS

The development takes place at a time when Sharif’s coalition government is planning to get a constitutional amendment passed from parliament to allegedly give an extended term to the country’s top judge. 

The amendment requires a two-thirds majority in both houses of parliament, though the coalition can lose a portion of its existing number of seats after the Supreme Court’s July 12 ruling on reserved seats gets implemented. 

The package of reforms, widely believed to include as many as 22 amendments to the constitution, is expected to increase the retirement age of superior judges by three years and change the process by which the Supreme Court chief justice is appointed.

The amendments have raised widespread concerns among opposition parties and legal experts who say the moves are aimed at increasing the government’s power in making key judicial appointments and dealing with the defection of lawmakers during house votes. 
 


Pakistani blasphemy suspect’s family forgives police officer accused of killing him

Pakistani blasphemy suspect’s family forgives police officer accused of killing him
Updated 19 September 2024
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Pakistani blasphemy suspect’s family forgives police officer accused of killing him

Pakistani blasphemy suspect’s family forgives police officer accused of killing him
  • Abdul Ali, 52, was shot dead last week in a heavily fortified police station in Quetta
  • Killer was a police office who had accessed facility by pretending to be Ali's relative

QUETTA: The family of a blasphemy suspect killed in custody in southwestern Pakistan has forgiven the police officer accused of killing him, saying they would not press charges “in the name of God.”

Abdul Ali, 52, also known as Sakhi Lala, was shot dead last week in a heavily fortified police station in Quetta, the capital of Balochistan province, by police officer Saayd Mohammad Sarhadi, who had accessed the facility by pretending to be Ali’s relative, police said.

“We will not fight the case,” Ali’s son Muhammad Usman told a press conference late on Wednesday, sitting with another brother and some elders from his tribal clan. “We have forgiven the police officer in the name of God.”

One of the elders, Faizullah Noorzai, said the tribe would disown Ali. “We and our families are the kind of people who would sacrifice their lives for the sake of the Prophet Muhammad and his respect.”

Blasphemy is punishable by death in predominantly Muslim Pakistan. No one has been executed by the state for the crime, but dozens of those accused have been lynched by mobs before trial.

Such killings are often glorified. The father of Ali’s alleged killer, Hajji Daad Muhammad, has been receiving visitors paying their respects at his house since last week’s killing.

The US Commission on International Religious Freedom says the South Asian country is one of the world’s strictest and most frequent enforcers of blasphemy laws.

Blasphemy accusations fueled mobs that attacked Christian neighborhoods in the eastern province of Punjab, burning several churches and displacing hundreds of people last year.

A court will consider the plea by Ali’s family for a pardon and decide whether to proceed with charging the officer, said a senior police officer who asked not to be named due to the sensitivity of the issue.

Ali’s alleged blasphemy centered on an argument he had had about politics and the Prophet Muhammad, according to a police investigator. He had been moved to the more secure police station after hundreds gathered outside the facility where he was initially detained, chanting that they wanted to kill him publicly.