Pakistanis divided as Afghan migrants face expulsion under new policy

Pakistanis divided as Afghan migrants face expulsion under new policy
Afghan refugees due for deportation to Afghanistan arrive at a holding center to undergo biometric verification by the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA), near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in Chaman on April 8, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 09 April 2025

Pakistanis divided as Afghan migrants face expulsion under new policy

Pakistanis divided as Afghan migrants face expulsion under new policy
  • Pakistan has asked all “illegal foreigners” and Afghan Citizen Card holders to leave or face deportation from April 1
  • Move is part of larger deportation drive that began in November 2023 and has seen over 900,000 Afghans expelled

ISLAMABAD: As Pakistan intensifies its campaign to expel thousands of Afghan migrants, opinions in Islamabad remain divided, according to interviews with residents.
Earlier this year, Pakistan’s interior ministry asked all “illegal foreigners” and holders of Afghan Citizen Cards — a document launched in 2017 to grant temporary legal status to Afghan refugees — to leave the country before Mar. 31, warning that they would otherwise be deported from April 1. The move is part of a larger repatriation drive of foreign citizens that began in November 2023, with over 900,000 Afghans expelled from Pakistan since.
While 19-year-old student Rubab Iffat called the deportations “not right,” others like teacher Pervaiz Akhtar supported the government’s decision, saying Afghans were against Pakistan and were behind terror attacks in the country. The government in Kabul denies Afghanistan is to blame for Pakistan’s security problems. 
“Even on social media, they [Afghans] are against Pakistan ... They make their living here, but they are against us,” Akhtar said. 
“If you look overall, even locally, if you ask someone what Afghans say about us, they are against our country. Terrorism is also being carried out from there [Afghanistan] so it is justified that they leave. And they should go by all means, their country is Afghanistan.”
But Iffat said the government was not “doing the right thing” by expelling Afghans:
“Because they have been living here [Pakistan] for a long time and their home is here now, their children are studying here, so this is their country too. They should be given the same rights as us.”
Meanwhile, Afghanistan-bound trucks have been piling up outside Pakistan migrant camps as pressure to leave mounts.
In a migrant camp in the southwestern border town of Chaman, Afghan migrant Ismail prepared to return to his home country, leaving behind an “unfinished” life after a decade in Pakistan.
“I had a stable job, I had found stability,” he said, standing in front of rows of loaded trucks bound for Afghanistan. “Then the government told us we had to leave.”
Ghulam Hazrat said he had to leave behind his house and business and in the days leading up to leaving Karachi where he has lived for years, he had faced harassment from police.
“We were harassed every day. They didn’t even spare us on the streets and threw us straight into jail,” Hazrat added.
“Because of all this, we became very desperate and decided to leave Karachi [for Afghanistan].”


Pakistan accuses India of ‘sponsoring terrorism beyond its borders’ at UN spat

Pakistan accuses India of ‘sponsoring terrorism beyond its borders’ at UN spat
Updated 5 sec ago

Pakistan accuses India of ‘sponsoring terrorism beyond its borders’ at UN spat

Pakistan accuses India of ‘sponsoring terrorism beyond its borders’ at UN spat
  • Islamabad responds to Indian FM describing Pakistan as “epicenter of global terrorism” during UNGA speech
  • Militaries of India, Pakistan engaged in four-day military conflict in May, killing over 70 people on both sides 

ISLAMABAD: A senior Pakistani diplomat at the United Nations this week responded to India’s allegations that its neighboring country was a “terrorist epicenter,” accusing Delhi of sponsoring cross-border “terrorism” as the war of words between the two nations at the global platform worsened. 

India’s External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, during his UN General Assembly speech on Saturday, said his country had a neighbor that was the “epicenter of global terrorism,” without naming Pakistan. 

His statement came after Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s UNGA speech on Friday, in which he offered talks to India. However, the Pakistani prime minister blamed India for seeking to “extract political gains” from a militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir’s Pahalgam, which killed 26 tourists in April. 

India had blamed Pakistan for the attack, a charge denied by Islamabad. The incident triggered a four-day military conflict between the neighbors that saw over 70 killed on both sides of the border before they agreed to a ceasefire on May 10. 

“India itself has been implicated in supporting and sponsoring terrorism beyond its borders,” Muhammad Rashid, the second secretary at the Pakistan Mission at the UN, said in a statement on Saturday. 

“There are credible reports pointing to networks run by Indian intelligence agencies to destabilize its neighboring countries.”

Pakistan and India routinely accuse each other of supporting militant groups waging attacks against the other. Pakistan alleges India arms and funds militants in its western provinces bordering Afghanistan through its Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) intelligence agency, charges New Delhi denies. 

Pakistan has also cited accusations by former Canadian PM Justin Trudeau, who had accused the Indian government last year of being involved in the 2023 killing of Sikh separatist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in British Columbia. India denied the allegations, triggering a diplomatic row between the two nations. 

India, on the other hand, accuses Pakistan of supporting militants in Indian-administered Kashmir, which Islamabad denies. The two countries have fought three wars since 1947, two of which were over the disputed territory of Kashmir. 

In his statement, Rashid said undermining regional stability and violating international law had become a “habit for India.”

“Therefore, such actions expose the duplicity of its counterterrorism claims and raise serious concerns about its role in fueling rather than combating terrorism,” the statement said. 

While the fragile ceasefire between India and Pakistan continues to hold, tensions remain high as Delhi vows to hold in abeyance the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960 that governs the sharing of the Indus River system between the two countries. 

Pakistan has warned that any attempt to restrict or divert the flow of its waters by India would be taken as an “act of war” and would be firmly responded to.


Pakistani parents rebuff HPV vaccine over infertility fears

Pakistani parents rebuff HPV vaccine over infertility fears
Updated 42 min 29 sec ago

Pakistani parents rebuff HPV vaccine over infertility fears

Pakistani parents rebuff HPV vaccine over infertility fears
  • Only half of 11 million girls were administered HPV vaccine jabs in Pakistan’s first such campaign
  • Many Pakistanis believe conspiracy theory that Western vaccines are used to curb Muslim population

ISLAMABAD: Misinformation plagued the first rollout of a vaccine to protect Pakistani girls against cervical cancer, with parents slamming their doors on health care workers and some schools shutting for days over false claims it causes infertility.

The country’s first HPV vaccine campaign aimed to administer jabs to 11 million girls — but by the time it ended Saturday only around half the intended doses were administered.

A long-standing conspiracy theory that Western-produced vaccines are used to curb the Muslim population has been circulating online in Pakistan.

Misinformation has also spread that the vaccine disrupts the hormones of young girls and encourages sexual activity, in a country where sex before marriage is forbidden.

“Some people have refused, closed their gates on us, and even hid information about their daughter’s age,” vaccinator Ambreen Zehra told AFP while going door to door in a lower-middle-income neighborhood in Karachi.

Only around half the intended vaccines had been administered, according to a federal health department official who spoke to AFP on condition of anonymity.

“Many girls we aimed to reach are still unvaccinated, but we are committed to ensuring the vaccine remains available even after the campaign concludes so that more women and girls get vaccinated,” they said on Friday.

One teacher told AFP on condition of anonymity that not a single vaccine had been administered in her school on the outskirts of Rawalpindi because parents would not give consent, something she said other rural schools had also experienced.

A health official who asked not to be named said some private schools had resorted to closing for several days to snub vaccine workers.

“On the first day we reached 29 percent of our target, it was not good, but it was fine,” said Syeda Rashida Batool, Islamabad’s top health official who started the campaign by inoculating her daughter.

“The evening of that first day, videos started circulating online and after that it dipped. It all changed.”

A video of schoolgirls doubled over in pain after teargas wafted into their classroom during a protest several years ago was re-shared online purporting to show the after-effects of the vaccine.

The popular leader of a right-wing religious party, Rashid Mehmood Soomro, said last week the vaccine, which is voluntary, was being forced on girls by the government.

“In reality, our daughters are being made infertile,” he told a rally in Karachi.

‘THIS WILL CONTROL POPULATIONS’

In 95 percent of cases, cervical cancer is caused by persistent infection with Human Papillomavirus (HPV) — a virus that spreads through sexual activity, including non-penetrative sex, that affects almost everyone in their lifetime.

The HPV vaccine, approved by the World Health Organization, is a safe and science-based protection against cervical cancer and has a long history of saving lives more than 150 countries.

Cervical cancer is particularly deadly in low and middle income countries such as Pakistan, where UNICEF says around two-thirds of the 5,000 women diagnosed annually will die, although the figure is likely under-reported.

This is because of a significant lack of awareness around the disease, cultural taboos around sexual health and poor screening and treatment services.

It is underlined by the damaging belief that only women with many sexual partners can contract sexually transmitted infections.

In Europe, where the HPV vaccine has been highly effective, there were around 30,000 diagnoses across all 27 EU nations in 2020, of which around one-third of women died, according to the European Commission.

“My husband won’t allow it,” said Maryam Bibi, a 30-year-old mother in Karachi who told AFP her three daughters would not be vaccinated.

“It is being said that this vaccine will make children infertile. This will control the population.”

Humna Saleem, a 42-year-old housewife in Lahore, said she thought the vaccine was “unnecessary.”

“All cancers are terrible. Why don’t we tell our boys to be loyal to their wives instead of telling our girls to get more vaccines?” she told AFP.

Pakistan — one of only two countries along with Afghanistan where polio is endemic — remains stubbornly resistant to vaccines as a result of misinformation and conspiracy theories.

After marking one year without polio cases for the first time in 2023, the crippling disease has resurged with 27 cases reported in 2025 so far.

In response to overwhelming misinformation about the HPV vaccine, Pakistan’s minister of health, Syed Mustafa Kamal, took the bold move to have his teenage daughter vaccinated in front of television cameras.

“In my 30-year political career I have never made my family public,” he told reporters.

“But the way my daughter is dear to me, the nation’s daughters are also dear to me, so I brought her in front of the media.”


Pakistan PM seeks report on flood damages within a week to plan rehabilitation

Pakistan PM seeks report on flood damages within a week to plan rehabilitation
Updated 19 min 38 sec ago

Pakistan PM seeks report on flood damages within a week to plan rehabilitation

Pakistan PM seeks report on flood damages within a week to plan rehabilitation
  • Monsoon rains and floods killed over 1,000 people and affected millions, with Punjab and KP worst hit
  • Sharif instructed officials to ensure coordination between federal agencies and provincial authorities

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday directed officials to produce a comprehensive report within a week on damages caused by recent monsoon floods, saying the assessment was essential for planning relief and recovery operations.

Heavy rains and floods in Pakistan have killed more than 1,000 people since the monsoon began in late June. Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) reported over 500 fatalities, the highest number for any province, while Punjab suffered large-scale devastation in late August when torrential rains and water releases from Indian dams triggered floods that raised its cumulative death toll to more than 300.

Authorities said over 4,700 villages were inundated in Punjab, affecting 4.7 million people, and the province mounted its largest-ever search and rescue operation, evacuating 2.6 million people and 2.1 million animals.

“The assessment of damages to crops and infrastructure after the floods should be completed at the earliest to facilitate comprehensive planning for relief and rehabilitation,” Sharif said, according to a statement from his office.

He instructed officials to present a full report within a week.

Sharif, who chaired the meeting via video link from New York after addressing the United Nations General Assembly, ordered accelerated relief and rehabilitation measures, saying his government would “not rest until the people in the flood-affected areas are rehabilitated.”

He directed Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal to closely monitor aid and recovery operations, convene regular review meetings and ensure coordination between federal agencies and provincial authorities.

Sharif also emphasized preventive steps against waterborne diseases, called for special measures to cultivate suitable crops in the flood-hit areas and instructed the National Highway Authority (NHA) to expedite work on repairing the damaged section of the M-5 motorway near Jalalpur Pirwala.

Officials briefed the prime minister that about 350,000 displaced people had already returned home, while others still in camps in Sindh were expected to return soon as floodwaters recede.


Pakistani province’s chief says won’t back military operation, urges talks with Afghanistan

Pakistani province’s chief says won’t back military operation, urges talks with Afghanistan
Updated 27 September 2025

Pakistani province’s chief says won’t back military operation, urges talks with Afghanistan

Pakistani province’s chief says won’t back military operation, urges talks with Afghanistan
  • PM Sharif’s coordinator dismisses Ali Amin Gandapur’s statement, says only targeted operations being carried out
  • Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has seen rising militant attacks that Islamabad blames on groups based across the Afghan border

PESHAWAR: The chief minister of Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, Ali Amin Gandapur, on Saturday opposed any military operation in the region and instead called for dialogue with Afghanistan, as he addressed a rally demanding the release of his party’s jailed founder Imran Khan.

KP shares a long and porous border with Afghanistan, with strong cultural and linguistic ties to Pashtun populations across the frontier. The province has seen a surge in militant violence in recent years, with Islamabad accusing groups based in Afghanistan of cross-border attacks — allegations the Taliban government in Kabul denies.

Relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan soured in 2023 when Islamabad cracked down on undocumented migrants, most of them Afghans, after a wave of deadly suicide bombings and militant assaults in which officials said Afghan nationals were involved, though no evidence was shared publicly.

While the federal government and military have taken a hard line on Kabul, the KP administration has signaled it favors engagement with the Afghan Taliban.

“We do not want and will not allow any operation in our province,” Gandapur told the rally. “The federal government and [state] institutions must listen: we want talks. Our leader Imran Khan has [also] spoken about peace talks. Talk to Afghanistan today and solve the problem.”

The KP chief minister, who addressed thousands of supporters of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party in Peshawar, insisted war was not an option.

“We will raise our voice against it,” he said.

Responding to Gandapur’s remarks, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s coordinator on KP affairs, Ikhtiar Wali Khan, dismissed them as a political attempt to stir public sentiment.

“There is no military operation happening in any part of the province,” he told Arab News over the phone. “Only kinetic and precise intelligence-based operations are taking place in the volatile regions of the province. No displacement and relocation have been occurring, but the militants are being targeted precisely.”

He questioned the provincial government’s stance over how to deal with militancy, asking: “If the federal government and the army don’t take action against the militants in the region, will PTI and Ali Amin Gandpur ensure and take responsibility for peace in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa?”

Militancy has surged in KP since the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) ended a fragile truce with the state in November 2022, stepping up attacks on security forces.

Pakistan’s military has since intensified intelligence-based operations in the region, especially in the restive tribal districts along the Afghan frontier.


Pakistan PM seeks concrete plan to expand beef exports to Malaysia

Pakistan PM seeks concrete plan to expand beef exports to Malaysia
Updated 27 September 2025

Pakistan PM seeks concrete plan to expand beef exports to Malaysia

Pakistan PM seeks concrete plan to expand beef exports to Malaysia
  • Shehbaz Sharif says Pakistan-Malaysia trade has ‘enormous potential’ that needs to be fully harnessed
  • Malaysia is a major supplier of palm oil to Pakistan, with halal meat still a largely untapped trade area

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday directed his administration officials to draw up a concrete plan for boosting Pakistani beef exports to Malaysia, as part of efforts to strengthen trade with the Southeast Asian nation.

Malaysia is a major supplier of palm oil to Pakistan, with halal meat remaining a largely untapped area for bilateral trade. The prime minister chaired a meeting to review the trade situation via video link from New York, where he has been attending the United Nations General Assembly this week.

“There is enormous potential in Pakistan-Malaysia trade and we are taking steps to harness it fully,” Sharif said, according to a statement circulated by his office after the meeting.

“Relevant institutions must prepare a viable and concrete plan for the export of Pakistani beef to Malaysia,” he instructed.

The prime minister described Pakistan and Malaysia as having “long-standing brotherly relations spanning decades” and said Kuala Lumpur had always stood by Islamabad in times of difficulty, support which Pakistan “values highly.”

Pakistan and Malaysia established diplomatic ties in 1957, soon after Malaysia’s independence, and cooperate in forums such as the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and the Commonwealth.

The centerpiece of their economic relationship is the Malaysia-Pakistan Closer Economic Partnership Agreement (MPCEPA), signed in 2007 and in force since 2008.

Recovering from a prolonged economic crisis that pushed it close to default, Pakistan is striving for export-led growth and actively seeking new markets.