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Number of Afghan refugees in country growing steadily

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Number of Afghan refugees in country growing steadily
By Zulfiqar Ali
PESHAWAR: Despite the continuing process of voluntary repatriation of Afghans, the number of registered refugees in Pakistan is growing steadily as approximately 50,000 children are born to refugee families every year.

The UN refugee agency said that the National Database and Registration Authority (Nadra) would register some 150,000 children born to the registered parents in past five years and issue birth certificates to over 330,000 Afghan children below the age of 18.

UNHCR spokesperson Dunya Islam Khan told Dawn that around 182,000 refugee children who had reached the age of five would get their separate Proof of Registration (PoR) cards by the end of the year.

She said that of total 330,000 Afghan children born to the registered parents, about 150,000 children below the age of five would be registered, but they would not get separate PoR cards.

About 50,000 children are born to refugees every year
“Separate PoR cards will be issued to refugee children of age five and above,” she said. Nadra had launched renewal of PoR cards in February last and in the first phase all expired cards had been renewed in July. The PoR card system was introduced in 2009 to legalise temporary stay of the registered Afghans in Pakistan, which is not signatory to the UN refugee conventions.

In the second phase which will be completed by the end of December next the authority will register 150,000 children below the age of five while 182,000 children of age five and above would get the PoR cards.

The PoR cards issued to around 1.6 million refugees validating their stay in Pakistan had expired in Dec 2012 and the government after an agreement with the Afghan government and the UN agency extended the stay of documented refugees till Dec 2015.

Pakistan has extended stay of documented Afghan refugee for the third time. Officials said that around two million Afghans had been staying without legal documents and they did not want to return to their country due to certain reasons.

Interestingly, the voluntary repatriation process is slower than the existing birth rate of the refugees in Pakistan though the UN agency has been offering return package to the returnees. The UNHCR said that the return figure from Iran was higher compared to Pakistan in 2014 so far.

Data compiled by the UN agency shows that a total of 83,423 refugees returned to Afghanistan from Pakistan in 2012 while the figure came down to 31,224 in 2013. According to the data, only 8,964 refugees have repatriated since January last. From Khyber Pakhtunkhwa which hosts a major portion of the registered refugees only 4,700 Afghans have returned to their country during the current year. According to the UN agency, a total of 5,725 Afghans have sought asylum in Pakistan.

“Only 31,224 refugees have retuned to Afghanistan under the UN-sponsored voluntary repatriation programme contrary to the birth of over 50,000 refugee children every year, which is a major dilemma,” said an official. “The government is likely to extend stay of the refugees beyond 2015 if the current status quo continued,” he remarked, saying that official policy about the deportation of undocumented Afghans had been put in cold storage. The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government had announced deportation of all illegal Afghans from the province in 2012 and police were ordered to take action against Afghans not having the PoR cards.

The UNHCR said in its current fact sheet that security and political transition in Afghanistan as well as the lack of sufficient development investment that contributed to enhancing voluntary repatriation or maintaining asylum space, had resulted in lower voluntary repatriation levels than anticipated.

Published in Dawn, August 28th, 2014
 
Number of Afghan refugees in country growing steadily
By Zulfiqar Ali
PESHAWAR: Despite the continuing process of voluntary repatriation of Afghans, the number of registered refugees in Pakistan is growing steadily as approximately 50,000 children are born to refugee families every year.

The UN refugee agency said that the National Database and Registration Authority (Nadra) would register some 150,000 children born to the registered parents in past five years and issue birth certificates to over 330,000 Afghan children below the age of 18.

UNHCR spokesperson Dunya Islam Khan told Dawn that around 182,000 refugee children who had reached the age of five would get their separate Proof of Registration (PoR) cards by the end of the year.

She said that of total 330,000 Afghan children born to the registered parents, about 150,000 children below the age of five would be registered, but they would not get separate PoR cards.

About 50,000 children are born to refugees every year
“Separate PoR cards will be issued to refugee children of age five and above,” she said. Nadra had launched renewal of PoR cards in February last and in the first phase all expired cards had been renewed in July. The PoR card system was introduced in 2009 to legalise temporary stay of the registered Afghans in Pakistan, which is not signatory to the UN refugee conventions.

In the second phase which will be completed by the end of December next the authority will register 150,000 children below the age of five while 182,000 children of age five and above would get the PoR cards.

The PoR cards issued to around 1.6 million refugees validating their stay in Pakistan had expired in Dec 2012 and the government after an agreement with the Afghan government and the UN agency extended the stay of documented refugees till Dec 2015.

Pakistan has extended stay of documented Afghan refugee for the third time. Officials said that around two million Afghans had been staying without legal documents and they did not want to return to their country due to certain reasons.

Interestingly, the voluntary repatriation process is slower than the existing birth rate of the refugees in Pakistan though the UN agency has been offering return package to the returnees. The UNHCR said that the return figure from Iran was higher compared to Pakistan in 2014 so far.

Data compiled by the UN agency shows that a total of 83,423 refugees returned to Afghanistan from Pakistan in 2012 while the figure came down to 31,224 in 2013. According to the data, only 8,964 refugees have repatriated since January last. From Khyber Pakhtunkhwa which hosts a major portion of the registered refugees only 4,700 Afghans have returned to their country during the current year. According to the UN agency, a total of 5,725 Afghans have sought asylum in Pakistan.

“Only 31,224 refugees have retuned to Afghanistan under the UN-sponsored voluntary repatriation programme contrary to the birth of over 50,000 refugee children every year, which is a major dilemma,” said an official. “The government is likely to extend stay of the refugees beyond 2015 if the current status quo continued,” he remarked, saying that official policy about the deportation of undocumented Afghans had been put in cold storage. The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government had announced deportation of all illegal Afghans from the province in 2012 and police were ordered to take action against Afghans not having the PoR cards.

The UNHCR said in its current fact sheet that security and political transition in Afghanistan as well as the lack of sufficient development investment that contributed to enhancing voluntary repatriation or maintaining asylum space, had resulted in lower voluntary repatriation levels than anticipated.

Published in Dawn, August 28th, 2014


It is sad and good at the same time, sad because we have to take burden of these people, good that we can annex Afghanistan using them or at least have great influence on them :D if don't want this to happen then please take back your people :D
 
It is sad and good at the same time, sad because we have to take burden of these people, good that we can annex Afghanistan using them or at least have great influence on them :D if don't want this to happen then please take back your people :D

Spare the thought;

Our survival is predicated on throwing these people back in that shit hole of a country and seal the border.
Mine it, fence it, and dump nuclear waste on and around it.

These people are the cancer of humanity and must be restricted to their own locality.
 
The Afghan children who are born in Pakistan, are they considered Afghan or Pakistanis?
 
The Afghan children who are born in Pakistan, are they considered Afghan or Pakistanis?

We do not consider these haramkhor Pakistanis but refugees/mahajrs. I hope from now on Nadra keep track of these people, many have gotten fake Pakistani cards. These haramis are like biharis of India but worse. Its good thing no one can settle in Pak Kashmir areas of G-B otherwise they could have made majority there considiring GB population. They are already problem in Balochistan because of its small population.

The problem are Afghan pashtuns, they hate punjabis. But they hate Tajiks, Uzbeks, Hazaras even more. But now Tajiks are powerfull in Afghanistan, not because of numbers but because Afghan pashtuns have not come out of caves.

We do not have any interest in annexing dud land like pashtun majority areas of Afghanistan. Whole country is dud land but pashtun majority areas do not even have natural resources. So even if tomorrow Afghan pashtun beg i doubt Islamabad will allow them to be part of pure land.

It is sad and good at the same time, sad because we have to take burden of these people, good that we can annex Afghanistan using them or at least have great influence on them :D if don't want this to happen then please take back your people :D

Dude these haramkhors grow up thinking land up to Jhelum belong to them. These people have taken panga with wrong kind, more misery awaits them. Annexing Afghanistan will put them out of their misery.
 
The Afghan children who are born in Pakistan, are they considered Afghan or Pakistanis?

They are confused themselves... one of my Pak/Lahore born Afghani frnd commented that when he went to Afghanistan (for the first time for a wedding) he was called "Pakistani" .. yet here they call themselves Afghans... even though they have Pak NICs...

No wonder nobody likes them.. they mostly live in illegal settlements (katchi abadis) ...n are involved in crimes etc... (not all but a big number)... even in Khyber Agency (bordering Afghanistan) locals dislike them...
 
This is all thanks to corrupt politicians ignorance. All these refugees end up joining criminal groups or terrorist groups, they should be deported from Pakistan other wise only problems will come for Pakistan.
 
Although I think these ppl don't deserve the kind of life they have being refugees, Pak should take actions to stop them from getting in, we have our own issues to deal with, taking more ppl in this overpopulated country will not be any good for us
 

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