Pakistan to consider extending deadline for Afghan refugees facing mass deportation


FILE PHOTO: Afghan refugees embrace each other before leaving for Afghanistan at a bus stand in Karachi on April 8, 2025. Earlier this year, Pakistan said it wanted three million Afghans to leave the country. - AFP

PESHAWAR, Pakistan: Pakistan will consider extending the deadline for 1.4 million Afghan refugees living legally in the country to return home, officials said on Monday (June 30).

Any extension approved by the government would be a relief for those who were previously ordered to return to Afghanistan by June 30, according to government and security officials. A decision could come on Tuesday when the Cabinet is due to meet.

In 2023, Pakistan launched a controversial crackdown on foreigners it said were in the country illegally, mostly Afghans.

Millions of Afghans have fled their homeland over the decades to escape war or poverty.

The officials - who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to talk to the media on the record - said the proposed extension was to allow the refugees more time to settle their personal affairs in Pakistan, such as selling property or wrapping up business activities, before returning to Afghanistan in an orderly and dignified way.

A senior ministry official said the decision to submit the extension proposal was made last week. A summary regarding the fate of the Afghan refugees has been forwarded for inclusion in the Cabinet agenda.

The Interior Ministry, which has overseen the sweeping crackdown on Afghans, did not immediately comment.

There was no comment from the Foreign Affairs Ministry, which previously said it expected Afghan authorities to create "conducive conditions” so those returning were fully integrated into Afghan society.

Earlier this year, Pakistan said it wanted three million Afghans to leave the country, including 1.4 million people with Proof of Registration cards and some 800,000 with Afghan Citizen Cards. There are a further one million Afghans in the country illegally because they have no paperwork, according to officials.

They said Pakistan’s Ministry of States and Frontier Regions submitted a proposal to the federal government recommending a six-month extension for Afghans with Proof of Registration cards.

Pakistan's expulsion campaign has drawn strong criticism from the UN and rights organisations.

The International Organisation for Migration said Monday that Afghanistan was not equipped to absorb such high numbers of returnees.

"Local systems are on the verge of collapse, threatening access to essential services for both returnees and host communities,” the UN agency added.

Human Rights Watch has accused authorities of arbitrarily detaining and forcibly deporting Afghans, many of whom, they say, face harassment under the Taliban who seized power in Afghanistan in 2021.

On Saturday, the UN refugee agency said at least 1.2 million Afghans have been forced to return from Iran and Pakistan this year. It warned that repatriations on a massive scale have the potential to destabilise the fragile situation in Afghanistan. - AP

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Aseanplus News

Taiwan restoration experts help families say goodbye to Hong Kong fire victims
1MDB: MACC to bring back recovered paintings worth over RM120mil
China’s military calls for tip-offs as it targets corruption in air force procurement
FBM KLCI ends at intraday high, marks 16-month high
5.7-magnitude quake hits waters near Philippines, says GFZ
General Border Committee to meet on Dec 24 to resume Thai-Cambodia ceasefire
US highlights Panama security ties as China-linked canal ports deal stalls
S'wak Deputy Premier wins defamation suit against state DAP chief, awared RM500,000 in damages
Traditional hanfu turn trips into cultural adventures in China
Bhutanese King recalls Thai comfort food and Buddhist warrior spirit in moving Chulalongkorn address

Others Also Read