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The woes of Bangalis of Karachi
Tribune Desk
Published at 08:36 PM June 12, 2017
bigstock-Karachi-Pakistan-2974613-690x450.jpg

Hundreds of thousands of Bangla-speaking people live in Karachi Bigstock

Hundreds of thousands of Bangla-speaking people live in Karachi in terrible conditions where they are denied citizenship rights.

A few days ago, Khairuddin was carrying fish from a local jetty to his house in a part of Ibrahim Hyderi in Karachi called Sau Quarters (hundred quarters) where fishermen – mostly of Bangali origin – reside with their families.

Some policemen stopped him on his way and asked him to produce his Computerised National Identity Card (CNIC). Khairuddin did not have a valid one. He claims the policemen offered to let him go if he gave them some money. He refused, he says.

The policemen took him to the lock-up of a police station nearby. By the time they set him free the next morning, his fish had gone rotten. He claims he incurred a loss of Rs 100,000 that has landed him in heavy debt.

Khairuddin once had a valid CNIC but it expired in 2013. He still carries it with him. When he approached the National Database and Registration Authority (Nadra), that issues and renews CNICs, he was told to show his parents’ identity documents and their marriage certificate to prove that they were residing in the then West Pakistan before the secession of Bangladesh in 1971.

He produced those documents, issued during Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s government in the 1970s. NADRA officials still refused to renew his card. They told him, he was not a Pakistani but a Bangladeshi.

“I was born in Pakistan and have lived all my life here. My parents used to live in Pakistan too. We have no connection with Bangladesh,” protests Khairuddin.

He cites many other cases from his community of Bengali fishermen to allege that only those who bribe Nadra officials can get their CNICs renewed. The going rates vary widely – anywhere between 5,000 rupees at the lower end of the spectrum and 30,000 rupees at the higher end, say welfare activists working with Bengalis living in different parts of Karachi.
bigstock-157116800.jpg

A fishing boat in Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan Bigstock

The fisher women’s plight
Machar Colony (fishermen’s colony in English) is one of the largest, and also one of the most unkempt slums of Karachi. Fenced between a rail track and Mauripur Road to the north and the Arabian Sea to the south, it has an approximate population of 85,000, according to the Pakistani Bengalis Action Committee, a community mobilisation group. Around 75% of its residents are believed to be Bengali, the committee says.

Uneven, dirt-filled streets wind along tiny houses in Machar Colony. Heaps of rubbish are strewn everywhere. A horrible stench– the combination of moist sea wind, rotting fish, sewage flowing through open drains and occasional smoke emitting from smouldering mounds of trash– engulfs the neighbourhood.

On a Saturday last month, about 15 women are gathered in a compound inside Machar Colony. Each of them is accompanied by her children, some as young as four years of age. Heaps of shrimp, interspersed with layers of ice to protect them from rotting, are placed in front of each family.

Fatima, a middle-aged Bangali woman, sits on a wooden plank inside the hut, cutting and peeling shrimp with help from her three small children. They all work with clockwork regularity.

A small bowl beside her carries tokens resembling poker chips. These tokens bear the name of a local fish processing company that she works for. The company gives her one token worth 50 rupees for every bucket full of shrimp (weighing about 15 kg) that she and her children peel.

At the end of the day, she collects all the tokens, receives their collective worth in rupees and goes home: with a paltry sum of Rs400-500 to show for her family’s hard day at work – but enough to put food on the table.

Working on ice-cold shrimp has made skin on Fatima’s fingers shrivelled and soggy. Every day after she gets back home, she dips her hands in alum water to get rid of the stench, massages her fingers with coconut oil and warms them for several minutes.

She could have avoided this, at least partially, if her husband had been working. When he could, he would go out to sea to catch fish and earn enough money to help his wife do only half as much shrimp-peeling as she has to do now. Their children also attended school then.

But now that the maritime officials are checking CNICs rigorously, he does not venture out to sea, fearing arrest for being a Bangladeshi living in Karachi illegally. “He has been unable to fish for the last six months or so,” Fatima says. She has stopped sending her children to school so that they can work with her full time.

Many other families in Machar Colony have similar stories.
2017-06-01T164326Z_1604102986_RC147CDCEF70_RTRMADP_3_PAKISTAN-DAILYLIFE-1024x673.jpg

A fisherman cleans a portion of a boat anchored at Ibrahim Hyderi, on the outskirts of Karachi, Pakistan on June 1, 2017 Reuters

Education denied
Ghulam Hussain, a tall, 19-year-old resident of the neighborhood, may not be able to continue his education because he does not have a CNIC. Wearing an old brown T-shirt with a famous brand’s logo on it, he looks older than he is – that is, if one can ignore the nascent growth of his facial hair.

I want to study, not run a shop

Hussain’s conversation is peppered with English phrases and occasional references to current affairs. He is studying privately for his intermediate exam which he will take showing a B-Form, a proof of his birth and parentage, to education authorities but he will need a CNIC if and when he wants to get into a college or a university.

Hussain did apply for a CNIC recently. He was asked to prove that his parents were Pakistani citizens so he presented some of his father’s documents: a non-computerised identity card, a domicile certificate and a letter from the Election Commission of Pakistan showing his name on an electoral list. Officials at the Nadra office still rejected his application, he says. They told him he was a Bangladeshi.

Hussain works with his 58-year-old father at their sweet shop in Machar Colony but he does not like the work. “I want to study, not run a shop.”

Around 300,000 Bangalis were residing in Karachi in the years immediately after the Partition. Most of them worked in garments factories or as domestic workers and chauffeurs, says Khwaja Salman Khairuddin who heads a political party, Pak Muslim Alliance, which is active among Karachi’s Bangali community. His father, Khwaja Khairuddin, was one of the main leaders of the movement for the creation of Pakistan and was a mayor of Dhaka in the 1960s when the city was the capital of East Pakistan.

Thousands of these Bangalis moved to Bangladesh after it seceded from Pakistan in 1971 but most continued to stay here, says Khwaja. Many others arrived in Karachi in small groups after 1971 because Bangladesh’s economy at the time was not doing as well as Pakistan’s, he says. These migrants are estimated to be around 200,000 today.

The total number of Bangalis currently living and working in Karachi, according to an informal survey carried out by his party, is around two million. They are scattered in about 105 settlements across the city, including Orangi Town (in district west), Ibrahim Hyderi and Bilal Colony (in Malir district), Ziaul Haq Colony and Moosa Colony (in district central), Machar Colony and Lyari’s Bangali Para (in district south).

These settlements are generally located either close to the sea or next to industrial areas since most of their residents work in fishing-related businesses or as labourers in factories.
2017-06-08T140330Z_584028345_RC1F29210A20_RTRMADP_3_GLOBAL-ENVIRONMENT-1024x673.jpg

A man takes a bath, with water from a street tap, to cool off during a hot and humid day in Karachi, Pakistan on June 8, 2017 Reuters

Less than second-class citizens
Almost every Bengali living in Karachi demands to be recognized as a Pakistani. As a way to ensure that, they have adopted a collective strategy in the ongoing national census. When official enumerators approach them, they register themselves as speakers of none of the nine languages listed in the census forms. Instead, they list their mother language as “others” since the option of choosing Bengali is not there. And, more importantly, they list their nationality as Pakistani.

Census takers do not accept their claims about nationality at face value. They accept them only after checking documents such as CNICs, marriage certificates (or nikah namas) or any other proofs of citizenship, says Khwaja.

But registering themselves as Pakistanis in the census may not automatically turn Bangalis into Pakistani citizens. This is exactly what they did in the previous census in 1998, according to Sheikh Muhammad Siraj, president of the Pakistani Bangalis Action Committee, but their citizenship woes continued even after that. If anything, these woes have become worse of late.

The other measure that many Bangalis adopted was to get Pakistan identity documents by any means possible, legal or illegal. A vast majority of them were successful in the endeavour when identity cards were made manually. Almost all of them succeeded in transferring those cards into CNICs when the government started issuing digital cards in the early 2000s.

We are not Bangladeshis, why should we accept an alien registration card or any other temporary identity

But over the last few years, the government has started a campaign to separate legitimate Pakistani Bangalis from illegal migrants from Bangladesh. Siraj himself is one of the people being scrutinised. He came to Pakistan from Bangladesh in 1980 and, like many others in his community, possessed a CNIC until it expired in 2014. The government has rejected his application for the renewal of his card.

Activists allege the authorities are forcing many legitimate Pakistani Bangalis to register as foreigners. Siraj’s own son, Muhammad Hanif, was registered as an alien in 2005 even though he was born in Pakistan in 1988 and has a birth certificate issued by the Sindh government. His alien registration card shows his place of origin as Bangladesh and his nationality as Bangladeshi.

This seems to go against the Pakistani Citizenship Act 1951 that states that “every person born in Pakistan after the commencement of this Act shall be a citizen of Pakistan by birth.” The only way to deny Hanif Pakistani citizenship, under the Act, is to prove that he is the offspring of either a foreign diplomat or an enemy alien.

Mohammad Alam, a Bangali rickshaw driver residing in Rehmatiya Colony near Gulshan-e-Iqbal, spends his spare time at the Sindh high court, assisting Bangalis registered as aliens to move court for their cause. “We are not Bangladeshis,” he insists. “Why should we accept an alien registration card or any other temporary identity,” he asks.

“That is tantamount to accepting that we are foreigners.”

Bangalis of Karachi have had their names on electoral rolls since the 1998 national census. Those who had valid CNICs at the time of elections in 2008 and 2013 would have also voted. Khwaja’s Pak Muslim Alliance, indeed, fielded three candidates in 2008 election – one for the national assembly and two for Sindh assembly (none of them polled more than a few hundred votes).

In the 2013 election, the number of the party’s candidates for Sindh assembly rose to six (though the votes they polled remained negligible). These candidates could not have contested the election without valid proofs of being Pakistani citizens.

“Our case is simple. If we are not Pakistanis then we should not have been counted as such in 1998. And if we were counted as Pakistanis back then, why don’t we have the right to citizenship now?” says Siraj. He also lists other characteristics of his community that, in his opinion, qualify them to be Pakistanis. “If we are living here, earning our livelihood here and not sending money to any other country, why can’t the government issue us CNICs?”

He has put together a huge pile of documents – newspaper clippings and letters addressed to different political leaders, government officials, state institutions, etc. He and his associates also met with Sindh governor Muhammad Zubair on March 24, 2017. “[The governor] has promised to take our case to the prime minister,” says Siraj.

Aliens in their homeland
A high-ranking official of the now defunct National Alien Registration Authority (established in 2000 but merged with Nadra in 2015-2016) says the government never cancels anyone’s citizenship merely on the basis of the language they speak.

“We asked people to bring proofs of their Pakistani citizenship – anything that could prove that they fulfilled the criteria as per the Pakistan Citizenship Act 1951. If they failed to do so, what else could we do if not cancel their citizenship,” he says, without wanting to be quoted by name because he works at a post in Nadra that does not authorise him to speak to journalists.

The official concedes there could have been some mistakes and some legitimate citizens might have been wrongfully put in the “foreigners” list. But, he adds, these mistakes account for just 1% of all the cases concerning Bangalis in Karachi.

Federal Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan addressed a press conference in Islamabad on April 15 this year. The main thrust of his conversation at the event was citizenships. He said the government had cancelled 174,184 CNICs because they belonged to people confirmed to be non-Pakistanis.

Without specifying how many of these were possessed by the citizens of which country, he said that 3,641 foreigners had voluntarily retuned their Pakistani CNICs. These included Indians, Bangladeshis, Afghans and Iraqis.

Being a Bangali (in Pakistan) is not a crime, being a Bangladeshi (and illegally residing in the country) is

Khan also said the government had blocked a little over 350,000 CNICs in total. Out of these, he said, 125,000 were held by non-Afghans – suggesting that some of them might have been held by Bangalis, Burmese and Iranians living in Karachi.

Other than the cancelled cards, the minister said, the remaining blocked cards were being unlocked for a period of 60 days during which time their holders could prove their citizenship. If they failed to do so they will be deemed as foreigners and their CNICs will be cancelled.

The minister then listed documents that people can show to prove their citizenship – an attested document showing the purchase or ownership of a piece of land, no matter how small; a domicile certificate; an attested family tree issued by the revenue department; educational certificates; passport or identity card; arms license; or any other government-issued document, verified by the respective issuing authority.

There is only one condition for the validity of these documents: they should have been issued before 1978.

Back in Karachi, activists complain that an unknown number of cards remain blocked even when their holders have produced verified proofs of their Pakistani citizenship– as per the minister’s directions. Blocking and cancelling CNICs cannot rid the government of foreigners living in Pakistan, particularly Bangalis and Burmese in Karachi, says Rana Asif Habib, a Sindh High Court lawyer who also heads a Karachi-based non-profit organisation, the Initiator Human Development Foundation.

These communities are present in the city in such large numbers that it is impossible to deport them all, he says. Pakistan, in fact, did try to deport thousands of people to Bangladesh in 1995-1996 but Bangladesh refused to take them back. Religious parties within Pakistan also strongly opposed the deportation.

Habib, who also appears at the high court on behalf of individuals fighting citizenship cases, believes the government will sooner or later have to form a policy for accepting them as citizens of Pakistan. That policy should make a distinction between Bangalis and Bangladeshis. “Being a Bangali (in Pakistan) is not a crime, being a Bangladeshi (and illegally residing in the country) is,” he says.

The post has been appended from the original article published in the Dawn Herald’s May 2017 issue under the headline Strangers in the house

http://www.dhakatribune.com/around-the-web/2017/06/12/woes-bangalis-karachi/
 
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They are rajakar and their descendant getting true test of their Pakistan.I doubt any genuine Bangladeshi have gone that place to live.Before 1971, half a million Bengali lived in then West Pakistan, most of them repatriated after 1974.Some remained and latter joined by pro pak Bihari and Bengali who could not digest the liberation of Bangladesh.Patriotic Bangladeshi didn't stay there.Even Runa Laila came back in Bangladesh in 1974, leaving behind her popular singing career opportunity there.So did Shabnam.
 
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They are rajakar and their descendant getting true test of their Pakistan.I doubt any genuine Bangladeshi have gone that place to live.Before 1971, half a million Bengali lived in then West Pakistan, most of them repatriated after 1974.Some remained and latter joined by pro pak Bihari and Bengali who could not digest the liberation of Bangladesh.Patriotic Bangladeshi didn't stay there.Even Runa Laila came back in Bangladesh in 1974, leaving behind her popular singing career opportunity there.So did Shabnam.
Nope most came after the war in the late 70,s they are illegal Bangladeshis
 
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Nope most came after the war in the late 70,s they are illegal Bangladeshis
It sound ridiculous that, Bengali didn't go to Karachi that much when it was the same country and those who went left mostly after 1971.But got a sudden passion to go there illegally after a decade? Was Pakistan than became suddenly like Dubai in late 1970s?
 
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It sound ridiculous that, Bengali didn't go to Karachi that much when it was the same country and those who went left mostly after 1971.But got a sudden passion to go there after a decade? Was Pakistan than became suddenly like Dubai in late 1970s?
Ask your countrymen why they went to Pakistan in the late 70,s and early 80,s we had to order a crackdown in Karachi because of a spike in illegal migration in benazir,s era from Bangladesh

http://asia.nikkei.com/magazine/201...mmigrants-in-Pakistan-find-it-hard-to-go-home

@Max @Zibago @Starlord ....With the exception of few...I think Bengalis are doing fine in Karachi...No?
Bangladeshi immigrants in Pakistan find it hard to go home
AMMAR SHAHBAZI, Contributing writer

20160329_bangladeshi-children_article_main_image.jpg

A new generation of Bangladeshi children are growing up in ghettos in Pakistan. (Photo by Ammar Shahbazi)

KARACHI, Pakistan When Kobir Ali arrived in Karachi in 1985, he was an enthusiastic teenager, all set to begin a dream life away from grinding poverty in his native Bangladesh. "I worked as a domestic servant for the first few years here and managed to send money to buy land in Feni, my hometown," he said. "Pakistan was a different country back then."

After 31 years, Ali wants to go home now, even as throngs of other desperate Bangladeshis (using fake Pakistani cnic,s) risk their lives trying to get to Europe, Australia and other developed countries.



Ali worked as a tailor for a textile factory for most of his adult life, but said he had not been able to save enough to send money to his parents in Bangladesh over the last few years. "There is no point in living here. I am becoming poorer every day," he said. He now works from home, making women's clothes.

20160401_bangladesh_1.jpg_middle_320.jpg

Kobir Ali says he is ready to leave his home in Moosa Colony, a Bengali ghetto in Karachi, to return to Bangladesh, which he left in 1985. (Photo by Ammar Shahbazi)

Close
20160401_bangladesh_1.jpg_article_main_image.jpg

Kobir Ali says he is ready to leave his home in Moosa Colony, a Bengali ghetto in Karachi, to return to Bangladesh, which he left in 1985. (Photo by Ammar Shahbazi)

WANTING MORE Thousands of illegal Bangladeshi immigrants who arrived in Pakistan in the 1980s are in the same boat as Ali. Then, the Pakistani economy was growing steadily, especially the industrial sector, while Bangladesh was battling extreme poverty.

Now these immigrants say they are trapped by the falling value of the Pakistani rupee against the Bangladeshi taka, tightening immigration laws in Pakistan and an ongoing diplomatic spat between the two countries.

Given a choice, most of these immigrants would prefer to go to Europe, if necessary using human traffickers to travel via Iran and Turkey. Their aim? To earn wages in stronger currencies in developed countries so they can rebuild their lives. But Europe is not an option for many because of the costs and risks involved.

Many Bangladeshis in Pakistan say traffickers have raised their "handling charges" after some European countries began accepting immigrants from the Middle East. The higher costs may also reflect the greater risks run by traffickers because of beefed-up Pakistani security in coastal areas of Baluchistan, on the main route to Iran, following the signing of a China-Pakistan Economic Corridor pact last year.

Bangladeshi immigrants are also keen on the Middle East. But opportunities to go there are few and far between. As a result, Bangladesh's recent and relative prosperity is emerging as the only realistic emigration option.

Bangladesh's Awami League government, led by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, has overseen a doubling of exports since it came into power in 2009, despite sporadic political tensions. The textile sector earned 90% of export revenues over that period.

Conversely, Pakistan's growth has slowed, plagued by an energy crisis and the seemingly endless war on terror. The government has had to rely heavily on international financial bailouts, increasing its debt burden. The economy has grown about 3% a year on average since 2009.



"Many factors are responsible for Pakistan's stagnation, but the energy crisis and the security situation stand out," said Sakib Sherani, an economist and CEO of Marco Economic Insights, a research house. "Bangladesh has managed to accelerate production over the years, which kept its balance of payments strong, while Pakistan had to borrow and rely on imports."

TRAPPED AND FRUSTRATED Formerly known as East Pakistan, Bangladesh broke away from Pakistan on Dec. 16, 1971, after a nine-month civil war. The nationalist Awami League has historically been hostile toward Pakistan, which it accuses of mass murders during the war.

Hasina's government has executed four pro-Pakistani politicians in the last three years, convicting them of war crimes in a controversial tribunal. The sentences drew intense criticism from the Pakistani government, which claimed that the trials were politically motivated, further straining relations.

Bangladeshi immigrants in Pakistan are mostly second-generation laborers who have spent their lives working illegally for the lowest of wages, said Zahid Farooq, a director at Urban Resource Center, a nongovernmental organization active in Karachi. "Historically, they were associated with the industrial sector because they were cheap to hire." Farooq said it was not surprising that many wanted to go back to Bangladesh since economically they were not doing well in Pakistan.

That frustration is shared by hawala dealers, who operate illegal money transfer businesses that Bangladeshi immigrants use to send money home. "The business is as good as dead," said a hawala operator who declined to give his real name but said he wanted to move away from Karachi.

"There was a time, not long ago, when our turnover would even hit a few millions [of rupees] every month, but it has significantly fallen over the past few years as Bangladeshis have stopped sending money. And the cut we get is no longer worth the risks involved in this illegal trade."

An aggressive drive by the Pakistani government to track and block fake identity cards -- an anti-terrorism move aimed at deterring Afghan nationals from settling in the country -- has brought yet more troubles for Bangladeshis.

Most of the estimated 3 million Bangladeshis in Pakistan arrived in the 1980s and settled in ghettos across Karachi. A majority acquired Pakistani identity cards and passports illegally, claiming that they had settled in West Pakistan (now Pakistan) before the creation of Bangladesh.

"Now the officials want proof of family trees, asking us for evidence that our parents were settled in West Pakistan before the 1971 war started," said Momin Mia, a fruit juice vendor who works in Gulistan-e-Jauhar, a middle-class neighborhood of Karachi. "I don't want to go through the trouble anymore. I just want to go back to Bangladesh," he said, adding that the police had extorted money from him.

Farooq said that such discrimination was rampant in Karachi. "We have whole ghettos full of illegal Bangladeshis in the city and the government knows that. But these policemen hound them just to make a quick buck."

HOSTILITY AT HOME Compounding their problems, Bangladeshi immigrants are finding that their home country is not willing to welcome them either.

The Awami League government faces an opposition composed of the center-right and pro-Pakistan Bangladesh Nationalist Party and a number of Islamic parties. Some returning immigrants traveling on Pakistani passports have been denied visas to enter Bangladesh because they were viewed as opposition supporters. "Hasina thinks we are terrorists because we lived in Pakistan for so long," Ali said. Bangladesh arrested three suspected militants traveling from Pakistan in January.

The Bangladesh government also suspects that many of those claiming to be returnees are ethnic Rohingya refugees from Myanmar who had entered Pakistan pretending to be Bangladeshis. Karachi is home to the second-largest Rohingya diaspora in the world after Chittagong in Bangladesh.

Many Bangladeshis believe that Pakistan trains radical young Rohingya men in madrassas (Muslim religious schools) and sends them to fight the Buddhist majority in Myanmar. When thousands of Rohingya left Myanmar in 2014, following communal riots, the Bangladesh government did not allow aid groups to use Bangladeshi territory to conduct relief efforts for refugees.

Diplomatic tensions have been rising, too. Last December, Bangladesh expelled a female Pakistani diplomat for her alleged links with "extremist elements." In what was seen as retaliation, Pakistan later expelled a female Bangladeshi diplomat.

These tensions are affecting legitimate immigrants to Pakistan from Bangladesh who want to travel back to their homeland. Mia said he had gone to the Bangladesh embassy to seek a visa for the fourth time in three months in mid-March, but was ignored by the staff. Mia, who has a wife and four children in Bangladesh, last visited in 2007. "Until a few years ago, we would just talk in Bengali at the counter and they would stamp a visa," he said.

Ali, too, was snubbed at the embassy a month ago. He is looking forward to getting married in his hometown and setting up a tailor shop in Dhaka, but those plans are all on hold. "I don't know how long I will have to wait," he said. "But I will wait because that's all I can do."
http://asia.nikkei.com/magazine/201...mmigrants-in-Pakistan-find-it-hard-to-go-home
 
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It sound ridiculous that, Bengali didn't go to Karachi that much when it was the same country and those who went left mostly after 1971.But got a sudden passion to go there illegally after a decade? Was Pakistan than became suddenly like Dubai in late 1970s?
70's and 80's were trying time in Bangladesh. People went to all sorts of weird places you wont imagine.
I know a guy from my village who came back with his Pakistani wife and 7 children. He brought them back in Bangladesh before leaving for UK. He went to Pakistan by land in 70s. They are still here.
 
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Ask your countrymen why they went to Pakistan in the late 70,s and early 80,s we had to order a crackdown in Karachi because of a spike in illegal migration in benazir,s era from Bangladesh

http://asia.nikkei.com/magazine/201...mmigrants-in-Pakistan-find-it-hard-to-go-home


Bangladeshi immigrants in Pakistan find it hard to go home
AMMAR SHAHBAZI, Contributing writer

20160329_bangladeshi-children_article_main_image.jpg

A new generation of Bangladeshi children are growing up in ghettos in Pakistan. (Photo by Ammar Shahbazi)

KARACHI, Pakistan When Kobir Ali arrived in Karachi in 1985, he was an enthusiastic teenager, all set to begin a dream life away from grinding poverty in his native Bangladesh. "I worked as a domestic servant for the first few years here and managed to send money to buy land in Feni, my hometown," he said. "Pakistan was a different country back then."

After 31 years, Ali wants to go home now, even as throngs of other desperate Bangladeshis (using fake Pakistani cnic,s) risk their lives trying to get to Europe, Australia and other developed countries.



Ali worked as a tailor for a textile factory for most of his adult life, but said he had not been able to save enough to send money to his parents in Bangladesh over the last few years. "There is no point in living here. I am becoming poorer every day," he said. He now works from home, making women's clothes.

20160401_bangladesh_1.jpg_middle_320.jpg

Kobir Ali says he is ready to leave his home in Moosa Colony, a Bengali ghetto in Karachi, to return to Bangladesh, which he left in 1985. (Photo by Ammar Shahbazi)

Close
20160401_bangladesh_1.jpg_article_main_image.jpg

Kobir Ali says he is ready to leave his home in Moosa Colony, a Bengali ghetto in Karachi, to return to Bangladesh, which he left in 1985. (Photo by Ammar Shahbazi)

WANTING MORE Thousands of illegal Bangladeshi immigrants who arrived in Pakistan in the 1980s are in the same boat as Ali. Then, the Pakistani economy was growing steadily, especially the industrial sector, while Bangladesh was battling extreme poverty.

Now these immigrants say they are trapped by the falling value of the Pakistani rupee against the Bangladeshi taka, tightening immigration laws in Pakistan and an ongoing diplomatic spat between the two countries.

Given a choice, most of these immigrants would prefer to go to Europe, if necessary using human traffickers to travel via Iran and Turkey. Their aim? To earn wages in stronger currencies in developed countries so they can rebuild their lives. But Europe is not an option for many because of the costs and risks involved.

Many Bangladeshis in Pakistan say traffickers have raised their "handling charges" after some European countries began accepting immigrants from the Middle East. The higher costs may also reflect the greater risks run by traffickers because of beefed-up Pakistani security in coastal areas of Baluchistan, on the main route to Iran, following the signing of a China-Pakistan Economic Corridor pact last year.

Bangladeshi immigrants are also keen on the Middle East. But opportunities to go there are few and far between. As a result, Bangladesh's recent and relative prosperity is emerging as the only realistic emigration option.

Bangladesh's Awami League government, led by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, has overseen a doubling of exports since it came into power in 2009, despite sporadic political tensions. The textile sector earned 90% of export revenues over that period.

Conversely, Pakistan's growth has slowed, plagued by an energy crisis and the seemingly endless war on terror. The government has had to rely heavily on international financial bailouts, increasing its debt burden. The economy has grown about 3% a year on average since 2009.



"Many factors are responsible for Pakistan's stagnation, but the energy crisis and the security situation stand out," said Sakib Sherani, an economist and CEO of Marco Economic Insights, a research house. "Bangladesh has managed to accelerate production over the years, which kept its balance of payments strong, while Pakistan had to borrow and rely on imports."

TRAPPED AND FRUSTRATED Formerly known as East Pakistan, Bangladesh broke away from Pakistan on Dec. 16, 1971, after a nine-month civil war. The nationalist Awami League has historically been hostile toward Pakistan, which it accuses of mass murders during the war.

Hasina's government has executed four pro-Pakistani politicians in the last three years, convicting them of war crimes in a controversial tribunal. The sentences drew intense criticism from the Pakistani government, which claimed that the trials were politically motivated, further straining relations.

Bangladeshi immigrants in Pakistan are mostly second-generation laborers who have spent their lives working illegally for the lowest of wages, said Zahid Farooq, a director at Urban Resource Center, a nongovernmental organization active in Karachi. "Historically, they were associated with the industrial sector because they were cheap to hire." Farooq said it was not surprising that many wanted to go back to Bangladesh since economically they were not doing well in Pakistan.

That frustration is shared by hawala dealers, who operate illegal money transfer businesses that Bangladeshi immigrants use to send money home. "The business is as good as dead," said a hawala operator who declined to give his real name but said he wanted to move away from Karachi.

"There was a time, not long ago, when our turnover would even hit a few millions [of rupees] every month, but it has significantly fallen over the past few years as Bangladeshis have stopped sending money. And the cut we get is no longer worth the risks involved in this illegal trade."

An aggressive drive by the Pakistani government to track and block fake identity cards -- an anti-terrorism move aimed at deterring Afghan nationals from settling in the country -- has brought yet more troubles for Bangladeshis.

Most of the estimated 3 million Bangladeshis in Pakistan arrived in the 1980s and settled in ghettos across Karachi. A majority acquired Pakistani identity cards and passports illegally, claiming that they had settled in West Pakistan (now Pakistan) before the creation of Bangladesh.

"Now the officials want proof of family trees, asking us for evidence that our parents were settled in West Pakistan before the 1971 war started," said Momin Mia, a fruit juice vendor who works in Gulistan-e-Jauhar, a middle-class neighborhood of Karachi. "I don't want to go through the trouble anymore. I just want to go back to Bangladesh," he said, adding that the police had extorted money from him.

Farooq said that such discrimination was rampant in Karachi. "We have whole ghettos full of illegal Bangladeshis in the city and the government knows that. But these policemen hound them just to make a quick buck."

HOSTILITY AT HOME Compounding their problems, Bangladeshi immigrants are finding that their home country is not willing to welcome them either.

The Awami League government faces an opposition composed of the center-right and pro-Pakistan Bangladesh Nationalist Party and a number of Islamic parties. Some returning immigrants traveling on Pakistani passports have been denied visas to enter Bangladesh because they were viewed as opposition supporters. "Hasina thinks we are terrorists because we lived in Pakistan for so long," Ali said. Bangladesh arrested three suspected militants traveling from Pakistan in January.

The Bangladesh government also suspects that many of those claiming to be returnees are ethnic Rohingya refugees from Myanmar who had entered Pakistan pretending to be Bangladeshis. Karachi is home to the second-largest Rohingya diaspora in the world after Chittagong in Bangladesh.

Many Bangladeshis believe that Pakistan trains radical young Rohingya men in madrassas (Muslim religious schools) and sends them to fight the Buddhist majority in Myanmar. When thousands of Rohingya left Myanmar in 2014, following communal riots, the Bangladesh government did not allow aid groups to use Bangladeshi territory to conduct relief efforts for refugees.

Diplomatic tensions have been rising, too. Last December, Bangladesh expelled a female Pakistani diplomat for her alleged links with "extremist elements." In what was seen as retaliation, Pakistan later expelled a female Bangladeshi diplomat.

These tensions are affecting legitimate immigrants to Pakistan from Bangladesh who want to travel back to their homeland. Mia said he had gone to the Bangladesh embassy to seek a visa for the fourth time in three months in mid-March, but was ignored by the staff. Mia, who has a wife and four children in Bangladesh, last visited in 2007. "Until a few years ago, we would just talk in Bengali at the counter and they would stamp a visa," he said.

Ali, too, was snubbed at the embassy a month ago. He is looking forward to getting married in his hometown and setting up a tailor shop in Dhaka, but those plans are all on hold. "I don't know how long I will have to wait," he said. "But I will wait because that's all I can do."
http://asia.nikkei.com/magazine/201...mmigrants-in-Pakistan-find-it-hard-to-go-home

As always...Zibago cheetah :cheers:
 
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Ask your countrymen why they went to Pakistan in the late 70,s and early 80,s we had to order a crackdown in Karachi because of a spike in illegal migration in benazir,s era from Bangladesh

http://asia.nikkei.com/magazine/201...mmigrants-in-Pakistan-find-it-hard-to-go-home
They went there because they thought their west Pakistani brother will accept them as a Pakistani citizen because of their Rajakar ideology and can live in their Pyara Pakistan. But could not guess,their former Pakistani citizenship became obsolete with the separation of their place of birth.They thought, their Pakistani citizenship still in work,as they were still Pakistani by their heart and refused to accept Bangladeshi citizenship.But Pakistani logic is different,If a place separate away from Pakistan then all it's inhabitants automatically lost their Pakistani citizenship,no matter how many of them didn't wanted that separation and still consider them as Pakistani.This is what exactly happened.

Bengali in Karachi:I am still Pakistani, because I never left being Pakistani in heart and deed although my home is no longer under it's control. So I left my home and came this place which is still Pakistan.

Pakistani from West Pakistan:No! you are not a Pakistani.Because most of your quom have left.So you have no option but to left as well.It doesn't matter whether you have maintained your allegation to Pakistan or not.Your citizenship is automatically cancelled.

This is the entire saga of Bengali in Karachi.Watch the numerous video in youtube about Bengali in Karachi.They all insist of being patriotic Pakistani but without any avail.
 
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They went there because they thought their west Pakistani brother will accept them as a Pakistani citizen because of their Rajakar ideology and can live in their Pyara Pakistan. But could not guess,their former Pakistani citizenship became obsolete with the separation of their place of birth.They thought, their Pakistani citizenship still in work,as they were still Pakistani by their heart and refused to accept Bangladeshi citizenship.But Pakistani logic is different,If a place separate away from Pakistan then all it's inhabitants automatically lost their Pakistani citizenship,no matter how many of them didn't wanted that separation and still consider them as Pakistani.This is what exactly happened.
Or maybe they went to the country against which they fought years ago because of poverty in their home country say it as it is
Bengali in Karachi:I am still Pakistani, because I never left being Pakistani in heart and deed although my home is no longer under it's control. So I left my home and came this place which is still Pakistan.
They are not Pakistanis they are forging documents to prove they were pro Pakistani but many turned out to be mukti dogs
Pakistani from West Pakistan:No! you are not a Pakistani.Because most of your quom have left.So you have no option but to left as well.It doesn't matter whether you renounced your allegation to Pakistan or not.Your citizenship is automatically cancelled.
Those who were pro Pakistan left in the early years rest of the Bengalis are pro India mukti dogs they should go back to their country
This is the entire saga of Bengali in Karachi.Watch the numerous video in youtube about Bengali in Karachi.They all insist of being patriotic Pakistani but without any avail.
Which is drama to get sympathies from us we wont budge they are illegal migrants from Bangladesh they should be thankful to us we are not killing them like in India
 
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They are not Pakistanis they are forging documents to prove they were pro Pakistani but many turned out to be mukti dogs
So, mukti hated to go in West Pakistan as a legal citizen without any visa, passport.That's why he waged war to get separated so that he can latter go there as an illegal migrant.Very logical indeed.
 
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So, mukti hated to go in West Pakistan as a legal citizen without any visa, passport.That's why he waged war to get separated so that he can latter go there as an illegal migrant.Very logical indeed.
Muktis were just paid raw clowns later on they went all over the world just like rest of the Bengalis many ended up in Karachi
 
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Those who were pro Pakistan left in the early years rest of the Bengalis are pro India mukti dogs they should go back to their country
Had Pakistan issued any deadline for Pakistani citizen living in Bangladesh to leave and relocate in Pakistan? Countries which usually separate in violent ways usually issue such deadline.For example,when India invaded and captured the Portuguese territory Goa in 1961,Portugal gave the choice of Goan people to relocate in Mainland Portugal.(Portugal granted citizenship to all Goan people.) Many Goan people accepted that opportunity.If my knowledge is correct than Pakistan didn't issued any such edict.That mean's Pakistan abandoned it's citizen in erstwhile East Pakistan after the war.
 
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Bengalis / East Pakistanis were Pakistanis until 1971. After that the affluent ones went back however there were many cooks and servants of Bengali ethnicity when I was living in Pakistan. I always had a Bengali Cook while I lived In Pakistan and until recently so did my in –laws. My parents preferred to get someone from the village even though most would leave for a better job after a couple of years.

It is distressing to hear that these people are being treated badly. Suggest they should approach a sympathetic journalist to take up their cause and bring it to the notice of authorities
 
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Had Pakistan issued any dateline for Pakistani citizen living in Bangladesh to leave and relocate in Pakistan?
Yep 71 +-5 is the timescale NADRA will accept from Bengalis and Biharis
.For example,when India invaded and captured the Portuguese territory Goa in 1961,Portugal gave the choice of Goan people to relocate in Mainland Portugal.(Portugal granted citizenship to all Goan people.) Many Goan people accepted that opportunity.If my knowledge is correct than Pakistan didn't issued any such edict.That mean's Pakistan abandoned it's citizen in erstwhile East Pakistan.
Nope we didnot those who supported us moved here in the early years rest are economic migrants
 
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