Pakistan announces mass deportation of 'illegal immigrants' including Afghans
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1970-01-01 08:00
Pakistan is launching a mass deportation, with "all illegal immigrants" required to leave the country by the end of October, authorities announced Tuesday.

Pakistan is launching a mass deportation, with "all illegal immigrants" required to leave the country by the end of October, authorities announced Tuesday.

If those groups haven't left Pakistan by November 1, "all law enforcement agencies would deport them," Caretaker Interior Minister Sarfraz Bugti told a news conference.

After that deadline, businesses and properties of "illegal aliens will be confiscated, and illegal business operators and their facilitators will be prosecuted," he said.

He added that "strict legal action will be taken against any Pakistani citizen or company providing accommodation or facilities to illegal aliens" residing in Pakistan after the deadline.

The decision was made by the National Apex Committee, which met earlier on Tuesday. A task force has also been formed to "seize people with fake identity cards and illegal properties built on their fake documents," while the country's national database and registration body has been ordered to cancel any "fake identity cards" and confirm any cases with DNA testing.

The immigrants targeted by the deportation include 1.73 million Afghan nationals, Reuters reported, citing Bugti.

Pakistan is home to one of the world's largest refugee populations -- including a sizable Afghan population. Given the two countries' shared border and deep cultural ties, their fates have always been linked -- with years of conflict and humanitarian crises in Afghanistan inevitably spilling into Pakistan.

Many Afghans fled the Soviet invasion of their country in 1979, settling in Pakistan during the biggest refugee crisis in the world at the time. Another wave took place in 2021 after the Taliban retook Kabul, with thousands of Afghans crossing the Pakistan border, often with incomplete paperwork while waiting for visas to third countries, such as the United States.

As of the end of 2022, Pakistan hosted more than 1.3 million registered Afghan refugees and 427,000 people in "refugee-like situations" from Afghanistan, according to the United Nations' refugee agency.

But their presence in Pakistan has long been controversial, with police crackdowns and threats of deportation in previous years. Hundreds of Afghans have already been deported from Pakistan this year, according to volunteer groups, citing local records.

At the news conference on Tuesday, Bugti claimed that Afghan nationals carried out 14 of the 24 major terrorist attacks that have taken place in Pakistan this year.

"There are attacks on us from Afghanistan and Afghan nationals are involved in those attacks. We have evidence present for that," he added.

On Monday, nonprofit organization Amnesty International released a statement claiming "many Afghans living in fear of persecution by the Taliban have fled to Pakistan, where they have been subjected to waves of arbitrary detentions, arrests, and the threat of deportation."

"It is deeply concerning that the situation of Afghan refugees in Pakistan is not receiving due international attention," it added.

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