In Pakistan, Afghan refugees face uncertain future amid resettlement rejections

In Pakistan, Afghan refugees face uncertain future amid resettlement rejections
Afghan refugees wait in a queue to cross the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in Torkham on October 27, 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 25 September 2024
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In Pakistan, Afghan refugees face uncertain future amid resettlement rejections

In Pakistan, Afghan refugees face uncertain future amid resettlement rejections
  • More than 40,000 Afghans in Pakistan are currently awaiting their resettlement to Western countries, Pakistani foreign office says
  • The United States has already provided a list of 25,000 Afghan refugees for resettlement, but the pace of progress remains slow

ISLAMABAD: In a cramped guesthouse in Islamabad, Sadiqullah Azizi, a pseudonym for a 59-year-old Afghan refugee, last week hurriedly packed what remained of his family’s belongings. His wife and children, with little choice, helped as they prepared to vacate the premises as a result of a final, devastating blow: rejection of their case for resettlement in Canada.
Azizi’s family, comprising more than a dozen members, did not come to Islamabad by choice. In August 2021, they received an email from the Canadian authorities, instructing them to travel to Kabul’s Hamid Karzai International Airport for evacuation to Canada. That email, reviewed by Arab News, represented a lifeline that has since reduced to three years of uncertainty, fear and disappointment.
Now exhausted, Azizi recounts how he started working with the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in 2002, shortly after the US-led coalition toppled the first Taliban regime. Although Azizi and his family are not paying for their accommodation or meals, he says it’s far from sufficient.
“Our children are our top priority and none of them have attended school due to the uncertainty of our future,” Azizi told Arab News, with his voice cracking.
He was involved in construction and logistics, and provided critical support to the US, Canadian, Dutch and Australian forces in Kandahar, Uruzgan and Nangarhar from 2002 till 2013. He still has dozens of certificates and photos of himself alongside Western forces during their deployment in Afghanistan, but his accomplishments feel distant and hollow.
Fearing deportation, the 59-year-old doesn’t even allow his family to visit a nearby public park since the Pakistani authorities launched a crackdown on undocumented foreign nationals last November and has since deported nearly 700,000 people, the majority of whom were Afghans.
“Our [Pakistani] visas have also expired and it feels as though the ground is slipping from beneath my feet,” he shared.
More than 40,000 Afghans are still in Pakistan and awaiting their resettlement abroad, according to the Pakistani foreign office. Pakistan has been in talks with various Western nations to help facilitate the relocation process and the United States has already provided a list of 25,000 Afghans for resettlement. However, the pace of progress remains slow.
For families like Azizi’s, life in Islamabad is one of isolation. The guesthouse where they stay offers no sense of security or future.
Engineer Ahmed, another pseudonym for a 38-year-old father of six who worked as an interpreter for the US and allied forces in Afghanistan from 2009 to 2018, said they were only provided accommodation and meals at the guesthouse and no other essentials.
“In fact, the meals aren’t enough to fill our stomachs,” he said, adding that they had to buy essentials like baby diapers, milk and medicines from their own pockets.
Ahmed shared his family had sold nearly all of their belongings in Kabul as they had burned all bridges in the hope of resettling in Canada.
“We have nothing left, no house, car or motorcycle. Everything was sold at a very cheap rate,” he said.
Another 35-year-old Afghan refugee, who assumed the name Amin Nasiri, awaits his family’s relocation to the US.
“It’s been three years since we arrived in Islamabad. We have no freedom here. We can’t access government hospitals or even buy a SIM card because our visas have expired,” Nasiri, who worked as a warehouse employee at the ISAF headquarters in Kabul from 2009 to 2012, told Arab News.
The 35-year-old lives with another Afghan family along with his wife, three sons and a daughter as he could not secure an accommodation in his own name due to his lack of documentation.
“I don’t know how much longer it will take,” said Nasiri, whose case remains unresolved. “I’ve borrowed a lot of money from friends and my eyes are constantly on my phone, hoping for an email about my case, but that moment hasn’t come yet.”
As Azizi continued packing at his guesthouse in Islamabad, he wrestled with the thought of how to break the news to his grandchildren.
He shared that over the past three years, whenever a bus headed to the airport stopped at the guesthouse’s gate, he would hide it from his grandchildren to avoid their inevitable question: “When will it be our turn to leave?”
Arab News tried to speak with others awaiting resettlement, but most were unable to summon the strength to recount their three years in Islamabad.
Now, with an eviction notice looming, Azizi feels trapped.
“My only question is why did Canadian immigration take so long? If they had rejected my case in the early months, I would have returned to my country. I would have told the Taliban that I had gone for medical treatment and had now come back. But after three long years, I no longer know what excuse I can offer,” he said as his voice tinged with despair.
The Canadian High Commission in Islamabad refused to discuss specific immigration cases but sent an email in response to Arab News queries.
“Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) sympathizes with the people in this extremely difficult situation as we continue to process applications as quickly as possible under the circumstances,” it said.
“Security screening is a complex process involving the decision of IRCC’s Migration Officer and various security partner experts,” it added. “Individuals are normally provided with a procedural fairness letter before negative decisions are made to provide them with an opportunity to provide additional information.”
The letter pointed out that how quickly an Afghan client was processed and subsequently approved depended on a variety of factors, many of which were beyond the control of the Canadian authorities, and were often directly related to where Afghans were located.
It noted that it was difficult to finalize the applications of Afghan nationals still residing in their country, urging them to move to a third country.
Meanwhile, Azizi, who complied with a similar request and arrived in Pakistan, says the fear of returning to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan weighs heavily on him.
“I wonder how Western countries can speak about human rights, yet when I look at my own case, I’m left questioning what world they live in,” he said.
“I can’t return to Afghanistan because the Taliban will think I’ve been sent on another spy mission,” he added. “Pakistan isn’t offering us refuge, and with no options left, I truly wonder where on earth we can find a place to call home.”


Hundreds in southern Pakistan demand justice for doctor killed after blasphemy accusations

Hundreds in southern Pakistan demand justice for doctor killed after blasphemy accusations
Updated 7 min 15 sec ago
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Hundreds in southern Pakistan demand justice for doctor killed after blasphemy accusations

Hundreds in southern Pakistan demand justice for doctor killed after blasphemy accusations
  • Dr. Shahnawaz Kumbhar was killed in alleged police shootout last week in southern Umerkot district
  • Protesters demand transparent inquiry, arrest of the police officers responsible for doctor’s killing 

KARACHI: Hundreds of civil society activists and residents of Pakistan’s southern Sindh province on Wednesday protested against the killing of a doctor allegedly by police after he was accused of blasphemy, demanding a transparent inquiry into the incident and action against the culprits. 

Dr. Kumbhar, accused of sharing blasphemous content online, was arrested last Wednesday in Umerkot district and killed hours later by police in a purported shootout. His family disputes the police account, claiming he was murdered while in custody. The incident has sparked widespread condemnation from Pakistani rights activists, who have demanded a transparent investigation.

Accusations of blasphemy — sometimes even just rumors — can spark riots and mob rampages in Pakistan. Although killings of blasphemy suspects by mobs are common, extra-judicial killings by police are rare.

The Sindh government last week suspended ten officers, including a deputy inspector general of police and registered a case against 34 suspects, out of which 15 were not identified, for burning Dr. Kumbhar’s body. 

“Today’s protest is purely to arrest the killers of Shahnawaz Kumbhar and punish them,” rights activist Kazwa Nawaz Asif told Arab News during a demonstration attended by hundreds at Umerkot. The protest was held in front of the district’s press club. 

Asif said the protest also aimed to prevent such incidents from occurring again in the future.

Suleman Rahimoo, another activist, questioned the government’s decision to conduct an inquiry against a deputy inspector of general police by another foficer of the same rank, pointing out that he was his colleague. 

“This is why we believe that a judicial inquiry should be carried out,” Rahimoo told Arab News.

Rights activist Sindhu Nawaz said the doctor had pleaded for an opportunity to explain his position, asserting that he was not the one using the account that posted the blasphemous content online.

“But he was killed overnight by the police officials and the body was handed over to fanatics who burnt it,” she said. 

Nawaz said Sindh is known as being a land where love, peace and interfaith harmony prevailed. 

“To uphold this identity, we felt it was necessary to hold a protest in Umerkot because Umerkot is the land where, during Eid, our Hindu brothers congratulate Muslims and when Holi is celebrated, the same Muslims celebrate with them,” she said. 

Nawaz vowed that the protest would continue until the officers responsible for killing Dr. Kumbhar are arrested and a judicial inquiry into the matter is conducted.

“This is our Sindh and we will continue to fight to restore this identity,” Nawaz said. 

Dr. Kumbhar’s killing marks the second such incident in recent weeks. Earlier this month, a police officer in Balochistan province killed a blasphemy suspect in custody, highlighting the grave dangers faced by persons accused of blasphemy in Pakistan.

Human rights groups and civil society organizations have urged the Pakistani government to repeal the country’s blasphemy laws, which they argue contribute to discrimination and violence. They have also called for a comprehensive review of law enforcers’ response to blasphemy accusations.


Pakistan PM, Bangladesh chief adviser agree to expand bilateral ties at UNGA sideline meeting 

Pakistan PM, Bangladesh chief adviser agree to expand bilateral ties at UNGA sideline meeting 
Updated 25 September 2024
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Pakistan PM, Bangladesh chief adviser agree to expand bilateral ties at UNGA sideline meeting 

Pakistan PM, Bangladesh chief adviser agree to expand bilateral ties at UNGA sideline meeting 
  • Shehbaz Sharif attends ceremony hosted by Dr. Yunus to mark 50 years of Bangladesh’s UN membership 
  • Relations between Pakistan, Bangladesh have improved since Sheikh Hasin’s ouster from office in August 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif met Bangladesh Chief Adviser Dr. Muhammad Yunus on Wednesday at the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) session in New York, with both sides agreeing to forge stronger ties and enhance bilateral cooperation in various fields. 

Bitter relations between Bangladesh and Pakistan have witnessed a thaw since the ouster of former prime minister Sheikh Hasina on Aug. 5 as a result of a student-led uprising in the country that saw hundreds killed.

Established together as one independent nation in 1947, Bangladesh won liberation from then-West Pakistan in 1971. Relations between the two countries continued to deteriorate during Hasina’s administration, which prosecuted several members of the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) party for war crimes relating to the 1971 conflict.

Sharif met Yunus at a ceremony hosted by the Bangladeshi leader to mark the completion of 50 years of Bangladesh’s membership in the United Nations, the Pakistani premier’s office said.

“The two leaders agreed to promote cooperation between Pakistan and Bangladesh in various fields,” the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) said. “There was a positive discussion regarding the expansion of bilateral relations between Pakistan and Bangladesh.”

Dr. Younis welcomed Sharif and his delegation, which included Defense Minister Khawaja Asif, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar, Education Minister Dr. Khalid Maqbool Siddiqui and the prime minister’s aide Tariq Fatemi, the PMO said. 

Pakistan’s foreign office earlier this month said Islamabad seeks “robust, multifaceted relations, friendly relations” with Bangladesh to ensure peace and stability in the region. 

Sharif arrived in New York this week to engage with world leaders and present Pakistan’s stance on key global issues such as “terrorism,” Israel’s war on Gaza and the Kashmir dispute. 


Pakistani officials visit Dubai immigration center, observe measures for resolving residency issues ‘swiftly’

Pakistani officials visit Dubai immigration center, observe measures for resolving residency issues ‘swiftly’
Updated 25 September 2024
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Pakistani officials visit Dubai immigration center, observe measures for resolving residency issues ‘swiftly’

Pakistani officials visit Dubai immigration center, observe measures for resolving residency issues ‘swiftly’
  • UAE’s amnesty scheme allows visa violators to regularize their status or leave without penalties 
  • Pakistani expatriates constitute one of the largest and most vibrant communities in the UAE

ISLAMABAD: A team from Pakistan’s Consulate General in Dubai visited the Al-Awir Immigration Center in Dubai on Wednesday and praised the various amnesty services being offered to visa violators in the Gulf country. 

The UAE’s two-month amnesty scheme, running from September 1 to October 31, allows visa violators, mostly from South Asia, to either regularize their status or leave without penalties.

The amnesty aims to reduce the number of undocumented residents, enhancing social stability and ensuring compliance. It offers a fresh opportunity for many in the country to rebuild their lives by securing legal status and better jobs.

“A dedicated team from the Consulate General of Pakistan conducted a visit to the Al Awir Immigration Center set up by the General Directorate of Residency and Foreign Affairs (GDRFA) Dubai and observed various amnesty services at the Center,” the Consul General of Pakistan in Dubai said in a press release. 

It said the Pakistani team was given an overview of the measures in place to assist individuals in resolving residency issues “swiftly and efficiently.”

“The visiting team conveyed deep appreciation to the UAE government for its continued support and compassion toward expatriate communities, particularly Pakistanis,” the statement said. 

Pakistani expatriates constitute one of the largest and most vibrant communities in the UAE. The Gulf country is Pakistan’s third-largest trading partner after China and the United States. It is also an ideal export destination for the South Asian nation as the short distance between the two countries limits transportation costs and facilitates commercial exchanges.

UAE is also home to over a million and a half Pakistani expatriates and after Saudi Arabia, is Pakistan’s largest source of workers’ remittances and the preferred choice of thousands of laborers who live and work in the country. 


Ex-PM Khan’s party threatens Pakistan-wide protests if denied permission for Rawalpindi, Lahore rallies

Ex-PM Khan’s party threatens Pakistan-wide protests if denied permission for Rawalpindi, Lahore rallies
Updated 25 September 2024
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Ex-PM Khan’s party threatens Pakistan-wide protests if denied permission for Rawalpindi, Lahore rallies

Ex-PM Khan’s party threatens Pakistan-wide protests if denied permission for Rawalpindi, Lahore rallies
  • Khan’s party plans to hold rallies in Rawalpindi, Lahore on Sept. 28 and Oct. 5, respectively 
  • PTI says going “all-in” to stop proposed constitutional amendments, demand Khan’s release

ISLAMABAD: The opposition party of jailed former prime minister Imran Khan has sought permission from authorities in Rawalpindi and Lahore to hold their upcoming rallies in the two cities, threatening nationwide protests if they are denied the same. 

Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party plans to hold public gatherings in Rawalpindi and Lahore on Sept. 28 and Oct. 5, respectively. The PTI aims to build public pressure for Khan’s release, who has been in jail since August last year on multiple charges including corruption, sedition and “terrorism.” Khan denies the allegations and says they are politically motivated to keep him and his party away from forming its government. 

The PTI, which had struggled to organize rallies in the country since last year to build public pressure for Khan’s release, this month held public gatherings in Islamabad and Lahore. However, the local administration in Islamabad registered criminal cases against the party’s leadership for allegedly violating their agreement with authorities. The gathering in Lahore came to an abrupt end on Saturday after authorities cut off electricity supply to the venue, accusing the party of violating the 3-6pm deadline. 

“PTI has decided to hold political gatherings in Rawalpindi at Liaqat Bagh on Sep 28 and in Lahore’s Minar-e-Pakistan from 5pm to 11pm on Oct. 5,” the party said in a statement. “As per the instructions of founding chairman Khan, the party will hold a nationwide protest if the permission is not granted.”

In the request submitted to the Rawalpindi deputy commissioner, the PTI said it believed in the maintenance of law and order, and discipline, and was ready to cooperate with authorities to ensure a “smooth and hassle-free political gathering.”

The party claimed that the denial of its right to hold political gatherings would be tantamount to “violating the basic constitutional principle on which the foundations of a political party rests.”

PTI said it does not accept the government’s move to have the proposed constitutional amendments passed by parliament. The party said it maintains that the constitutional amendments should only be introduced in the best interests of the country and not for personal gain, adding that it was going “all-in” to stop them.

The government’s proposed 53 constitutional amendments have alarmed experts and political opponents who say are aimed at asserting the executive’s authority over key judicial appointments. The proposed amendments are expected to establish a federal constitutional court, raise the retirement age of superior judges by three years and modify the process for the appointment of chief justice of the Supreme Court of Pakistan.

The amendments have also invited protests and anger from Pakistan’s legal fraternity, who have vowed to take to the streets if the government manages to pass them with a two-thirds majority. The government, on the other hand, has vowed to build a “wider consensus” on the constitutional amendments. 

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur, a senior member of Khan’s party, this week announced that the party will hold nationwide protests to demand the independence of the judiciary and Khan’s release from prison on Friday. 

CRACKDOWN

Khan’s party says it has faced an over a year-long crackdown since protesters allegedly linked to the party attacked and damaged government and military installations on May 9, 2023 after Khan’s brief arrest that day in a land graft case.

Hundreds of PTI followers and leaders were arrested following the riots and many remain behind bars as they await trial. The military, which says Khan and his party were behind the attacks, has also initiated army court trials of at least 103 people accused of involvement in the violence.

Khan, who has been in jail since last August, was ousted from the PM’s office in 2022 in a parliamentary vote of no confidence after what is widely believed to be a falling out with Pakistan’s powerful military, which denies being involved in politics.

Since his removal, Khan and his party have waged an unprecedented campaign of defiance against the military. 


In new challenge to army, Islamabad court questions ‘legal standing’ of military’s media wing

In new challenge to army, Islamabad court questions ‘legal standing’ of military’s media wing
Updated 25 September 2024
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In new challenge to army, Islamabad court questions ‘legal standing’ of military’s media wing

In new challenge to army, Islamabad court questions ‘legal standing’ of military’s media wing
  • Pakistan’s media watchdog has instructed TV channels to seek army media wing’s approval before inviting retired officers as defense analysts 
  • Justice Babar Sattar is among six Islamabad judges who accused army’s ISI spy agency of coercing them in ‘politically consequential’ cases

ISLAMABAD: The Islamabad High Court (IHC) on Wednesday sought a clarification from Pakistan’s electronic media watchdog about the legal standing of the military’s media wing and its “exclusive authority” to decide who could appear on television talk shows as a defense analyst.

The court was hearing a case challenging a much-debated April 2019 notification by the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority’s (PEMRA) in which it instructed TV channels to seek clearance from the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the military’s media wing, before inviting retired military officers on current affairs programs as analysts “to solicit their views on matters of national security.”

Following PEMRA’s notification, the ISPR released a list of 26 retired officers that it said were allowed to appear as defense analysts. 

“When asked as to what is the legal standing of ISPR and how is ISPR assuming the exclusive right to determine who can be a Defense Analyst in Pakistan, the learned Assistant Attorney General seeks time to assist the Court,” Justice Babar Sattar’s written order read. “Let the matter be fixed for 20-11-2024.”

The court also questioned why PEMRA had issued that notification in the first place and whether it had received a request from within the Pakistan army or ISPR.

PEMRA’s lawyer sought more time from the court to respond.

“Let PEMRA produce before the Court the original noting file on the basis of which the impugned notification was processed, recommended and issued to assist the Court as to why PEMRA felt the need to issue the said notification,” Justice Sattar wrote. 

During the hearing, the court also asked PEMRA’s counsel about the watchdog’s authority to regulate the content of discussions on TV and issue directions for the pre-clearance of individuals by ISPR or others. 

PEMRA’s lawyer pointed to Section 20-A of the PEMRA Ordinance, which relates to the obligation of licensees to uphold the sovereignty, integrity and security of Pakistan. 

“When asked as to what does pre-clearance of individuals providing content on TV have to do with the sovereignty or security of Pakistan and how can PEMRA impose a prior restraint on speech, the learned counsel for PEMRA seeks further time to assist the Court,” the written order read. 

Pakistani journalist bodies and many journalists have long accused the government and the powerful military of censoring the press. Both deny allegations and insist they do not supress the freedom of the press.

Justice Sattar’s new order is nit his first challenge to the army. He was among six Islamabad High Court judges who earlier this year wrote a letter to the Supreme Judicial Council watchdog and accused the military’s ISI spy agency of intimidating and coercing them over legal cases, particularly “politically consequential” ones.

The judges provided various examples of alleged interference, including a case concerning Pakistan’s imprisoned former prime minister Imran Khan. The letter also mentioned incidents where the judges said their relatives were abducted and tortured and their homes were secretly surveilled, aiming to coerce them into delivering favorable judgments in specific cases.

In February 2019, the Supreme Court had also delivered a scathing verdict on the military and intelligence agencies exceeding their mandate and meddling in politics over their handling of protests in 2017 by a religious-political party. 

In the past, Imran Khan’s main opponent, PM Shehbaz Sharif’s ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), had also accused the ISI of intimidating court decisions, including those that led to convictions of his elder brother Nawaz Sharif after his ouster from the prime minister’s office in 2017.

The powerful army plays an oversized role in Pakistani politics. The country has been ruled by military regimes for almost half its history since independence from Britain in 1947. Khan and the elder Sharif both have alleged that they were ousted by the military after they fell out with the generals.

The army denies it interferes in political matters. It has so far refrained from commenting on the judges’ letter regarding the ISI’s alleged interference and intimidation.