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Terrorism makes numerous refugees unwilling to leave Pakistan

On one hand you stated you don't care about humanitarian issues.
What have you learned than with your travelling ?
Ask the kids born in UK from Pakistani parents... would they like to come back to Pakistan! Ask a common Pakistani... if he wish to migrate to UK!
Anyone born in Pakistan and lived in Pakistan for than 10 years is Pakistani. If we failed to assimilate them than its our fault.
Today if 20 year old kid would tell an Afghan who lived 30 years in Pakistan, sounds absurd and unjust.
Don't forget many of Allah's messengers were refugees, incl. Mohammad pbuh.
Children of Afghan refugees who have been born in Pakistan should be considered Pakistani. It is morally unjustified to send them back to a land they know very little of. Regarding British Pakistanis, our forefathers that came to the British shores were not refugees but migrant workers invited by the British government to work and help build the economy especially Britians devastating war with Germany. Hundreds and thousands of Muslims from subcontinent which are considered parts of modern day Pakistan fought for Britian during the Second World War. Britian opened its doors to its common wealth nations including India, Bangladesh, Kenya, Jamaica etc. The very first Pakistanis who migrated worked in the already failing cotton mill industry in the norther English towns. The only 'desi' refugees were the East African Asians who were forced out of Uganda in 1972 by dictator Idi Amin, they were mainly of Indian Gujarati heritage but there were also people of Pakistani Punjabi and Sindhi ancestry from amoungst them. Nonetheless Pakistanis sending Afghans back will only hurt and cause more anxiety towards the poor innocent families forced to move to a foreign land.
 
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Like now these namak harams are pro Pakistan pfft we need to stop this bs
@RealNapster
I grew up around them had Afghan friends even students (dont ask details i was a home tutor :-// )

bhai ji mera moo naa he kulwaao inky mutalik. ban ho jaunga ni to. :lol:
 
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Sab ko pata hy tu ney kehna jis par mera dil aya hey usko rehny do bakiyon ko janey do :whistle:

Indeed. My own experience with them has been mostly negative both offline and online.

Liked @A-Team though.

Anyhow. We keep doing this and keep getting cold feet. Its a band aid. You need to rip it off in one stroke.

Last time we were doing really well but we got cold feet after that illegal green eyed woman ( what was her name?) And it became a scene.

This time there should be no stopping. Keep sending the trucks and keep fencing so that they won't return. Western side of pakistan really suffered in this brotherhood drama and quite frankly we achieved minimal.
 
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Afghaani ka jo yaar hay ghadaar hay ghadaar hay.
Us muamly mein bhi no compromise :D ?
Oh @django isko kiya ho gaya mujhay sazish ki bo a rahi hy

Indeed. My own experience with them has been mostly negative both offline and online.

Liked @A-Team though.

Anyhow. We keep doing this and keep getting cold feet. Its a band aid. You need to rip it off in one stroke.

Last time we were doing really well but we got cold feet after that illegal green eyed woman ( what was her name?) And it became a scene.

This time there should be no stopping. Keep sending the trucks and keep fencing so that they won't return. Western side of pakistan really suffered in this brotherhood drama and quite frankly we achieved minimal.
My real life experience has largely been positive but that doesnot mean i root for them
 
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Us muamly mein bhi no compromise :D ?
Oh @django isko kiya ho gaya mujhay sazish ki bo a rahi hy


My real life experience has largely been positive but that doesnot mean i root for them

In the end. They are refugees and they have to return. Pakistan cannot afford them. Negative positive experiences aside, I will say the same thing I said 2 years ago. We simply cannot afford it anymore. We are trying to gather our economy and develop pakistan and this refugee issue needs to be solved.

I am not blind to the positives that Afghan have brought. They contributed in the economy of some cities like Quetta as well as the carpet market but they largely brought negatives with them which changed the cultural dynamics of western pakistan.

However Pakistan is trying to enter a new phase in its evolution especially in its economical point and we simply cannot afford the burden of 2-3 million people and the security risks are simply too much especially considering the constant attempts by our eastern and western neighbor to destabilize pakistan especially the western part.
 
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Daal khor :D

I hate this word. This and gul khan. :p

The former is facepalm level considering the level of hunger and malnutrition amongst Afghans and the latter, you are making fun bcz they chose pakistan over the hell and ethnic strife that you call Afghanistan.

Waisay fully expecting the govt to get cold feet. Lolzz we can't pass a bill on FATA reforms despite support of opposition bcx PKMAP and Fazl disagree... Both of them would lose with this move so yeah not happening.
 
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Terrorism makes numerous refugees unwilling to leave Pakistan


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Imdad Hussain

JANUARY 7, 2018

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Amid the government’s decision of a month extension in the refugees’ stay, the issue of Afghan refugees is turning serious as a number of them are not willing to return to their country when terrorism in Afghanistan is on the rise.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and human rights organisations have already expressed concern over the refugees’ situation that could turn into humanitarian emergency. Despite the Ministry of States and Frontier Regions (SAFRON) suggestion to extend deadline for refugees’ stay until December 2018, the federal cabinet few days ago granted a 30-day extension to the legal stay of Afghan refugees in Pakistan. The decision worried a number of refugees thinking of unfavourable situation surrounding them.

Turial Sherzai, an Afghan residing in Islamabad as a refugee, told Daily Times that after the government decision, he quarreled with his wife and two adult children when they insisted on staying in Islamabad and opposed the idea of shifting to Kabul due to uncertainty and insecurity in Afghanistan.

“I run a well-established food-business under the name of Afghan Tikka in Islamabad but I don’t see any chance of my success in Afghanistan in presence of terrorism. My family is a business community, we have no land, no other source of income in Afghanistan,” Sherzai said.

Similarly, a number of Afghan refugees expressed their unwillingness to return to Afghanistan partially due to terrorism and economic insecurity to Afghanistan when both Pakistan and Afghanistan want resettlement of the refugee issue. “We would go under compulsion but if one asks our consent then we want a little bit longer stay, at least, until some stabilisation in our country,” said Akmal Jan in a telephonic conversation from Peshawar.

The recently released report of Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) acknowledges that Kabul has lost control over 41 percent area. The month of October witnessed high profile attacks by Taliban and Daesh militants across Afghanistan.

Zardasht Shams, Afghan deputy ambassador, said that finally all Afghans would have to return to take part in rebuilding in their country. However, he confirmed to Daily Times that according to their assessment about one quarter of the refugees were not willing to shift to their country due to terrorism and other factors.

He said that the Afghan government was lacking resources, yet it had taken an initiative with the help of China, Middle Eastern countries and others in Afghanistan to provide incentives to Afghans for returning home. The submission of the documents for registration of the Afghans, who were living in Pakistan without any proof, also shows that they don’t want to go to their country anytime soon. Nevertheless, terrorism and insecurity alone are not the factors that create hurdle in return of the refugees in a dignified manner. Haroon, a young refugee who was born in Islamabad and got education there, told Daily Times that he had friends in Pakistan. “I am to Islamabad instead of Kabul and more comfortable in the country.” Yet, a majority of the Afghan refugees are returning to their country as well. As much as 4.2 million have returned to Afghanistan since 2002, and about 60,000 registered refugees, retuned in 2017 alone as per the UNHCR record. Pakistani officials allege that the refugees’ camps were used by terrorists as safe havens and their early return was in national interest.



Pakistan, a country with 21 million population and high rate of unemployment, also considers over a million refugees a burden on their economy. “Pakistan’s economy has carried the burden of hosting Afghan refugees since long and in the present circumstances cannot sustain it further,” said the statement after the meeting that extended the refugees’ stay for a month. However, Pakistan has commitments with the UNHCR and the Afghan government that there would be no forced return. “We want Afghan refugees return with dignity as soon as possible. No doubt volunteer repatriation is the focus, we all should take steps for creating favourable conditions for their return,” Foreign Office Spokesman Dr Muhammad Faisal said. Activists of civil society and NGOs, during a protest held last month in Islamabad, called upon the government to extend deadline for refugees return to avoid their harassments at the hands of law enforcement agencies. According to a report issued by the Human Rights Watch, after a string of terrorist attacks in Pakistan in 2016, more and more Afghan refugees had to move to Afghanistan due to unfavourable situation in the neighbouring country hosting them for long and that created worse situation. In the current scenario, Spokesperson for UNHCR Qaisar Khan Afridi told Daily Times that the UN body was concerned about the decision to extend the proof of registration cards for a month that might affect almost 1.4 million registered Afghan refugees in Pakistan.

https://dailytimes.com.pk/175673/terrorism-makes-numerous-refugees-unwilling-leave-pakistan/
shit-just-got-real.jpeg

@Spring Onion @django @PakSword @Musafir117 @PaklovesTurkiye
When in the known human history Afghans was stable and peaceful .Wars ,conflicts and disputes are normal for them. Even if they don,t find enemy to fight they start fighting each others. So send them back to live their life under their normal culture OR send them to the counties who cry for human rights because this whole mess is created by those countries who cry for human rights like America England Franc Germany Australia etc These are the counties who has destroyed Afghanistan .
 
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Pakthunva is part of Afghan and 'Pasthun Muslims' are living in their own land :cheesy:

PS: Pakthunva was annexed by Sikhs from them British occupied it.
Going by that logic the whole of India is Part of Pakistan.
West Bengal is part of India since 1947, same as KPK is part of Pakistan since 1947... I am talking to someone high on cow excretions so was worth a try.
 
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