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Afghan ambassador Mosazai: No Afghan refugee involved terrorism in Pakistan

......came to Pakistan and live here and went through what we go through every day then talk about this issue.

I have been to Pakistan many times and nearly all of my family lives there. Pakistan should offer citizenship to Afghans in Pakistan in return to their loyalty. This will give them stake in peace and prosperity in Pakistan. Europe and United States have also offered nationality to illegal immigrants and refugees.
 
I have been to Pakistan many times and nearly all of my family lives there. Pakistan should offer citizenship to Afghans in Pakistan in return to their loyalty. This will give them stake in peace and prosperity in Pakistan. Europe and United States have also offered nationality to illegal immigrants and refugees.

Most afghan hold Pakistani CNICs through illegal means and majority of Pakistanis don't want Afghans in Pakistan any more due to their so long list of criminal and terror activities, you will see celebrations when Afghans will be sent back to there home land, we don't want million of refugees from a country who is ally of our enemy and its people are playing in their hands.
 
......from a country who is ally of our enemy and its people are playing in their hands.

You should ask ISI and Pakistan Army why they continued to train and equip Afghan armed groups after the withdrawal Soviet troops from Afghanistan. Nearly 3 million Afghans have been killed and 6 million refugees in wars in Afghanistan. Even now ISI is involved in training Talibans. No wonder they are not happy with Pakistan.
 
I have been to Pakistan many times and nearly all of my family lives there. Pakistan should offer citizenship to Afghans in Pakistan in return to their loyalty. This will give them stake in peace and prosperity in Pakistan. Europe and United States have also offered nationality to illegal immigrants and refugees.

Sorry bro, Afgans were given more than three decades to prove their loyalty and in return we got heroin addicts, Klashnikov culture and suicide bombers. Now don't tell me they were all Pakistani. Three decades are enough to poison a generation with another gift called religious extremism. We were a progressive nation before.
 
Sorry bro, Afgans were given more than three decades to prove their loyalty and in return we got heroin addicts, Klashnikov culture and suicide bombers. Now don't tell me they were all Pakistani. Three decades are enough to poison a generation with another gift called religious extremism. We were a progressive nation before.

Pakistan has also given Talibans to Afghanistan. You cannot criminalize every Afghan due to criminal activity of few individuals. Both Pakistan and Afghanistan should work for peace and ending support of militancy in the other country. May be Pakistan should take first step and end support of Talibans.
 
You should ask ISI and Pakistan Army why they continued to train and equip Afghan armed groups after the withdrawal Soviet troops from Afghanistan. Nearly 3 million Afghans have been killed and 6 million refugees in wars in Afghanistan. Even now ISI is involved in training Talibans. No wonder they are not happy with Pakistan.

I know what had really happened and why Pakistan had to support certain elements in Afghanistan but even Army has learnt their lesson but still Pakistan need some support in Afghanistan because India want to make that border unsafe and using Afghanistan to destabilize Pakistan. Taliban creation was not Pakistan offer, it was US and other regional players who wanted it and Pakistan got the blame.
 
There are Afghans in their thirties that were born in Pakistan, have never been to Afghanistan and they now have teenage children. You cannot expect them to go back to a war ravaged country. Actually there are many Afghan refugees that went to Afghanistan but returned after few months because they found Afghanistan as a foreign country and they felt themselves to be more Pakistanis than Afghans. Pakistani citizenship should be offered to all Afghans who wants to stay.
 
Pakistan has also given Talibans to Afghanistan. You cannot criminalize every Afghan due to criminal activity of few individuals. Both Pakistan and Afghanistan should work for peace and ending support of militancy in the other country. May be Pakistan should take first step and end support of Talibans.

Taliban is entirely a different debate as you cannot mix a day to day person with Taliban. We are talking about layman, poppies and klashnikov culture Which were not introduced by Talibans but immigrants from Afghanistan who are bandits and drug traffickers. I have yet to see one Afghan calling himself Pakistani and integrating with us. They always have hateful and bigoted views and as I have mentioned before that even my Pashtun friends dislike them despite both being no aliens to each other. They must go back as time is changed and lots have already taken citizenship illegally. Even whole world is strict on immigration now why shouldn't be us too.
 
Rehabilitating Afghan refugees – The Express Tribune

Rehabilitating Afghan refugees
By Editorial
Published: January 18, 2015


The situation for Afghan refugees remains precarious and insecure, as it usually is, with countless questions for many on what the future holds. While Pakistani authorities and the UN Refugee Agency, the UNHCR, have decided to extend repatriation of all Afghan refugees by December 2015, a majority are said to be unwilling to voluntarily return because of the unstable law and order conditions they fear in Afghanistan. What remains for hundreds of thousands of Afghans then is a constant state of insecurity, worries of unforeseen consequences of starting life again in Afghanistan and living as unwanted and frequently harassed members of society in Pakistan.

Many Afghans have lived here for most or all their lives, have been born, raised and married here, and this is the only home known to them. They must be treated with the empathy and humanity that is deserving for all when forced to move from one home to another. Although Pakistan has hosted Afghans for decades, the harassment of refugees at the hands of the police and other law-enforcement agencies remains a frequent problem, as was witnessed following the attack on the Army Public School in Peshawar on December 16. The narrative of Afghan refugees should also be included in the public narrative, for many in Pakistan equate the deteriorating law and order problem to the presence of refugees in the country. This is not only a very simplistic explanation but ignores the complex situation that Pakistan is faced with and avoids looking at the problem within. Even if all refugees are sent back by the end of the year, it is safe to say that Pakistan’s law and order problems will not end overnight.

The provincial governments concerned must ensure that there are no forced evacuations from Afghan settlements or arbitrary repatriations. All such moves must be planned, systematic and done through the UNHCR. At the same time, the international community must also support Pakistan as it still hosts the largest refugee population in the world and has done so for the longest period of time. Pakistan’s role as a host must be recognised and all assistance given to ensure a timely, safe and compassionate return for all.

Published in The Express Tribune, January 19th, 2015.

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Pakistan’s Tribal Areas Demand Repatriation of Afghan Refugees
By Ashfaq Yusufzai • PESHAWAR, Pakistan, (IPS) • January 1, 2015
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They number between two and three million; some have lived in makeshift shelters for just a few months, while others have roots that stretch much further back into history. Most fled to escape war, others simply ran away from joblessness.

Whatever their reasons for being here, Afghan refugees in Pakistan all now face a similar plight: of being caught up in the dragnet that is sweeping through the country with the stated goal of removing ‘illegal’ residents from this South Asian nation of 180 million people.

According to the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR), some 1.6 million Afghans are legally residing in Pakistan, having been granted proof of registration (PoR) by the U.N. body. Twice that number is believed to be unlawfully dwelling here, primarily in the northern, tribal belt that borders Afghanistan.



“Forced repatriation will expose us to many problems." -- Gul Jamal, an elderly Afghan refugee in Peshawar, Pakistan
Most arrived during the Soviet invasion of 1979, the chaos of war squeezing millions of Afghans out of their embattled nation and over the mountainous border that stretches for some 2,700 km along rocky terrain.


The Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and what was then known as the North-West Frontier Province, now called Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), offered an easy point of assimilation, the shared language of Pashto bridging the divide between ethnic Pashtun Afghans and the majority Punjabi population.

But what began as a warm welcome has turned progressively sour over the decades, as Afghans are increasingly blamed for rising crime, unemployment and persistent militancy in the region.

The Dec. 16 terrorist attack on a school in the KP’s capital Peshawar – which killed 132 children – has only added fuel to a fiery debate on the status of Afghan refugees, who are accused of swelling the ranks of the Pakistani Taliban and affiliated militant groups operating with impunity in the tribal areas.

Three days after the massacre, on Dec. 19, KP Chief Minister Pervez Khattak convened an emergency cabinet meeting to demand the immediate removal of all Afghan refugees, claiming that the grisly attack on the Army Public School was planned in Afghanistan.

His call for repatriation joined a chorus that has been growing steadily louder in northern Pakistan as the average citizen struggles to come to terms with an era of terrorism that has resulted in over 50,000 deaths since 2001, when the U.S. occupation of Afghanistan prompted a second wave of immigration into Pakistan.

A heated national debate eventually resulted in a decision to allow lawful Afghan residents to remain in the country until the end of 2015, at which point plans would be made for their safe return.

A previous plan, which followed on the heels of a Peshawar High Court order to repatriate Afghan refugees by the end of 2013, did not see the light of day, largely as it would have entailed over a billion dollars in international assistance.


Afghans own 10,000 of the 20,000 shops in Peshawar, capital of Pakistan’s northern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, and also run a range of informal businesses, such as street stalls where they hawk goods. Credit: Ashfaq Yusufzai/IPS

Tired of waiting for government action, however, local authorities have taken the law into their own hands by embarking on a major crackdown on Afghan refugees.

About 80 percent of crimes in KP are committed by Afghans,” alleged KP Information Minister Mushtaq Ghani.

“They are involved in murders and kidnapping for ransom, but they disappear after committing these crimes and we cannot trace them,” he told IPS.


“Therefore we demand that those having PoR be restricted to camps, and those without [their papers] sent home,” added the official, whose province is home to an estimated one million Afghans.

Police Officer Khalid Khan says his force is arresting roughly 100 people each day. “Every house is searched,” he told IPS, adding that even those who live in “posh localities” are being investigated as possible unlawful residents.

Terror and crime are not the only problems for which Afghans are being blamed. Trade and industry experts here claim that illegal ventures established by refugee communities have destroyed local businesses.

According to Ghulam Nabi, vice president of the KP Chamber of Commerce and Industries, Afghans run 10,000 of the estimated 20,000 shops in Peshawar; but since they are not registered residents, they are not subject to the same taxes as Pakistani shop-owners.

He told IPS his department has been “urging” the federal government to repatriate Afghans so locals can continue to do their trade. He also alleged that refugees’ demand for housing has pushed rents to unaffordable prices.

Besides hosting hundreds of thousands of Afghan refugees, the KP is also saddled with scores of displaced Pakistanis, the most recent influx arriving in the midst of a government military campaign in North Waziristan Agency aimed at rooting out insurgents from their stronghold.

Abdullah Khan, a professor at the University of Peshawar, told IPS that two million displaced Pakistanis from adjacent provinces are now residing in KP, many of them in makeshift ‘tent cities’ erected in the Bannu district.

According to Khan, Afghanistan’s gradual return to democracy has paved the way for safe return for refugees. He, along with other experts and officials, see no further reason for Pakistan to continue to host such a massive international population within its borders – especially with so many domestic issues clamouring to be dealt with.

Former cricket legend Imran Khan, whose Pakistan Tehreek-e Insaf (Pakistan Movement for Justice) party rules the KP province, has also echoed the demand.

“The government issues 500 Pakistani visas to Afghans at the Torkham border [a major crossing point connecting Afghanistan’s Nangarhar province with FATA] everyday but an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 people cross the border daily,” he said on Dec. 18.

“The illegal movement takes place because we don’t have a system to track these people and their activities here,” he added.

In a bid to rectify gaps in the system, police in KP are now blocking cell phones belonging to Afghans and taking steps to regulate the movements of refugees who may be in violation of their visa status.

But many Afghan residents claim the allegations are unfounded, while those who have lived here for generations consider Pakistan their home. Others are simply afraid of what will be waiting for them if they do go back.

Gul Jamal, an Afghan elder, told IPS that while his family was eager to return, the situation back home was “extremely precarious”.

“There are no education or health facilities, and no electricity,” he claimed, adding that job opportunities too are few and far between in Afghanistan.

He hopes the Pakistan government will “take pity” on his people. “Forced repatriation will expose us to many problems,” he explained.

In an interview with IPS on Dec. 22, Federal Minister for States and Frontier Regions Abdul Qadir Baloch categorically stated that legal refugees would stay on until the end of 2015 as per the government’s agreement with UNHCR.

“The registered Afghan refugees have never been found to be involved in terrorism-related incidents in the country and they won’t be sent back against their will,” Baloch stressed.

“The government will protect legal Afghan [immigrants] against forced repatriation,” he asserted.

Edited by Kanya D’Almeida

Pakistan’s Tribal Areas Demand Repatriation of Afghan Refugees | Inter Press Service
 
@ArsalanKhan21

I think he has a point. Pakistan is the home of all the sub-continental Muslims.

Just because they don't have Pakistani nationality doesn't mean anything. These are still sub continental Muslims, and Pakistan is their home. Good OR bad.
 
It also depends on ISI and Pakistan Army when do they stop funding Talibans in Afghanistan. They may return when there is peace in Afghanistan.



Just today PIA flight to Toronto was carrying Heroin.Pakistanis are also smuggling drugs into Canada. Does that mean all Canadian Pakistanis are guilty ?

Backpack full of heroin found at Pearson, say border agents - Toronto - CBC News

Backpack full of heroin found at Pearson, say border agents
17 kilograms in 'brick' format
The Canadian Press Posted: Jan 23, 2015 11:49 AM ET Last Updated: Jan 23, 2015 12:12 PM ET

the-backpack.jpg

The backpack that authorities thought was too heavy. It contained what they think is 17 kilograms of heroin. (CBSA)

Canadian border officials say 17 kilograms of heroin was seized at Toronto's Pearson International Airport after a flight came in from Pakistan.

The Canada Border Services Agency describes last week's seizure as "significant."

The agency says that during a routine inspection at the airport on Jan. 16, CBSA officers monitoring baggage being unloaded from a flight from Pakistan noticed one backpack that was heavy.

Upon further examination, the officers discovered six wrapped bricks inside the backpack.

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Bricks of suspected heroin at Pearson. (CBSA)

The agency says the bricks contained a substance that tested positive for suspected heroin during field testing.

The packages were turned over to Peel Regional Police and the investigation is still ongoing but there's no immediate word of any arrests.



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Heroin another gift of Afghanistan hard working people.
 
Let me tell u guys a story...

i was in fsc...one day i was going to college in suzuki ( u know it ) and an afghan was sitting next to me...a man was sitting in front of him...people were talking on random topics suddenly the man sitting in front of him started the topic on afghans...the afghan and the man talked for a while on random things...then finally the man asked him wht if u had an atom bomb...what would u do with it ....i was shocked on the reply from afghan....his reply was.." hum sub say pehly Pakistan ko mary ga is nay sialkot tak hamara ilaqa pe qabsa kia hua ha phr Amreeeca ko khatam kary ga " ....
now u decide whether to trust on Afghan or not..








I've had similar experience with a Afghani, believe me they hate Pakistan to the CORE....
 
I have met many Afghans who are hardworking and honest people and cannot return to Afghanistan due to ongoing insurgency which is partly funded by ISI and Pakistan Army.
Wow! :woot: That's gonna rile a lot of people out here! :lol:
 

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