What's new

'It's ripped families apart': the border wall no one is talking about

This is baseless, bogus propoganda.

What about the walls in Palestine. You to climb/get through Israeli security harassment everyday just to get to work.
O I forgot same Jews who built those walls also own the world media.
 
.
Just another scripted lies made in India
 
.
Well what a load of BS...
  • Every border in the world divides people. So why cry about Pak-Afghan border?
  • USA is building walls along Mexican border
  • Same people cry and do malicious propaganda against Pakistan that the terrorism is coming from Pakistan so if Pakistan is fencing the border, they should rather appreciate & support it
  • Hence it is proven that these morons are pathological liars and hypocrites

The solution is very simple. Keep building the fence and keep repatriating Afghans.

Afghans don't belong in Pakistan. Afghans belong in Afghanistan.
 
.
Which tool is used for measuring familiarity and in what units?
I read a little every now and then. Daily Mail is probably the most trashy and sexist paper. I read and listen to a few Brit counterparts giving their own opinions on other forums. So do I think that makes me an expert, No. What else?
just as I thought your experience of reading the press is on internet! I have read them before the days of internet and their content was a lot more vile and derogatory in the past. I am not an expert on british press but I am certainly aware of their gutter nature.
 
Last edited:
.
usual bullshit from brits, as expected.....lets turn tables and switch sides see if they would like to write the same on Brexit issue? after all there are mothers in Bulgaria, Poland, and Other eastern states whose sons are working in Britain and they will suffer with the border control ......and no one is talking about it......

people from Eastern Europe are recent immigrants to UK. they are one of the reasons UK wants out of EU
 
.
There are tens of thousands of families in the west who have been ripped apart by the Visa policies. Should the Visa restrictions be removed all across the west?
 
Last edited:
. . . .
Build that wall , then mine that beautiful wall and then trench it a big deep and amazing trench …. Who give a ffuk for any one or any thing,, we are already 30 years late,,,,,,
 
Last edited:
.
When there was an open border Pakistan received the following in copious amounts;

Terrorists hell bent on destroying Pakistani infrastructure and killing innocent Pakistanis.
All sorts of A class drugs, with cocaine and heroin being chief of these.
Mass smuggling of firearms and other illegal items.
Consumer goods destined for the black economy.
Hordes of criminals, including violent pedophiles.


Now it's closing it will be for the greater good.
 
Last edited:
.
Not a single Pakistani comment.
And such a baised article.
But they continue to write that .
Let them and ignore them..

No, always counter such articles. Even if its just by tweeting our narrative and linking in the original article. The UK really has no moral high ground to write or publish such articles, they are quick to condemn China for Hong Kong and lambaste Pakistan for the border fence when what are they doing with the recent drama tv serial they call Brexit?

Hypocrites!
 
.
Another nonsense article on border security fence. If 'Afghan' families feel ripped apart, why don't they return to Afghanistan already. They keep telling us on social media how good Afghanistan is compared to Pakistan, if that is they case, why are they still in our country?



Two children at the Turkham border, the official crossing point between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Photograph: Stefanie Glinski/The Guardian


Keramat used to visit her sons all the time, crossing the border between her home in Afghanistan’s Kunar province into Pakistan, where they live and work.

But a fence built to mark a border between the two countries, which has not been recognised by the Afghan government, has made the 55-year-old’s journey much longer, and more bureaucratic.

Keramat had to get a passport, and needs a visa every time she wants to cross the border. She travels to neighbouring Nangarhar province, and from there she enters Pakistan. It can now take her several hours to cover a distance that used to take her less than one.

“My sons have worked in Pakistan for decades and we used to visit each other often. Now we barely spend time together. I miss them,” she says.

Walls and fences have been going up along borders across the globe, but relatively little attention has been paid to the one being erected along the Durand Line, the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan, considered to be one of the world’s most dangerous international crossings.

Plans for the 2,400 km-long barrier – mostly running along deserted high-mountain terrain – have been in motion for the past 15 years, but work on the fence is more recent, having started over the past two years. “We already finished 1,000km and it’s likely going to take another two or three years to complete the rest,” says Zahid Nasrullah Khan, Pakistan’s ambassador to Afghanistan.

The Durand Line was first established in 1893, but never recognised by Afghanistan. Relations between the two neighbours remain tense.

The fence, enforced with barbed wire and at times hesco blocks – a bulletproof wire mesh container filled with dirt – is surrounded by deep trenches and guarded by Pakistan’s border patrol.

Yet it’s not only the Afghan government that opposes the venture. Ethnic Pashtuns, who live on both sides of the Durand Line, are also protesting.

“It’s ripped our family apart,” says Keramat. “We’re the same tribe and the same people on both sides. We speak the same language and share the same culture. We’ve always lived together, but the fence is breaking families and friendships apart.”

About 28% of Pakistan’s population and 42% of Afghanistan’s are ethnic Pashtun – although Afghanistan’s last census was conducted nearly 40 years ago and it is estimated that numbers have increased.

But Khan says a physical barrier was needed because of increased security threats, and to put an end to smuggling activities between the two countries.

“The good old days are over,” he says. “The world is haunted by terrorists.”

At the same time, Afghans accuse Pakistan of fuelling violence and war in the country.

“It would be great if they [Pakistan] controlled the flow of terrorists, but that’s not what is happening,” says border police guard Ali Hamkar. “The fence creates problems for civilians. It doesn’t keep militants out – they still have their way. Pakistan built a wall, but they allow some unofficial gates.”

There have always been guards along the Durand Line, but Pakistan hopes the fence will make it possible to control the flow of people.

Ali Hamkar says one of the “unofficial” gates is located in Sobay village, in Nangahar’s Durbaba district. Durbaba is gun land. Villagers report that each man carries a weapon here, mostly for personal protection.

“Every night, the Taliban crosses the border here alongside hundreds of smugglers,” says Jani Gul, 35, a smuggler who crosses between Afghanistan and Pakistan’s Tirah Bazaar most nights.

He lives in a village with an economy largely dependent on illegal business. He smuggles electronics, clothes and occasionally drugs into Pakistan, while other people he knows bring weapons into Afghanistan.

Most smugglers cross the mountain terrain at night on mules, their goods strapped to the animals. Smuggling avoids paying Pakistani import tax and even though most goods come from China, it’s cheaper to ship them to Afghanistan first, where smugglers purchase them and sell them at a higher price in Pakistan.

Jani says that border guards on both sides are bribed. “I pay 1,500 rupees [$10] per mule and then they turn a blind eye.” According to the Pakistan and Afghanistan joint chamber of commerce and industry, about 20 smuggling gates exist along the border.

Haji Saraf, a 65-year-old who runs a smuggler’s union near Sobay, says that more people still cross into Pakistan unofficially compared with taking the legal route – despite the fence, including him.

“My daughter is married to a distant relative in Pakistan, and it’s the only way I visit her,” he explains from the union’s headquarters, a room furnished with pillows and carpets where he spends most of his time.

End all immigration controls – they’re a sign we value money more than people
Gary Younge
Gary_Younge,_L.png

Read more
Advertisement
Khan insists the fence isn’t supposed to restrict the flow of ordinary people, and denies the existence of the smuggling gates.

“The tough part is that our tribal areas should have never been separated in the first place,” says Shakir Khan, 25, who recently returned to Pakistan after his brother’s death, marrying his widowed wife according to tradition. Economically, he says, there are differences between Pakistan and Afghanistan’s border areas, but when it comes to daily life, it’s largely the same.

“I have relatives with Pakistani passports and others with Afghan passports. Here in this area, we’re the same people and international borders won’t change this.”

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/global-...apart-the-border-wall-no-one-is-talking-about


the wall is designed to keep terrorist out... if you like we can send to your country
 
. .

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom