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Hosting Afghans a Huge Burden, Pakistani President Says

17th November, 2023 · admin

Sarah Zaman
VOA News
November 16, 2023

ISLAMABAD — Pakistani President Arif Alvi said his country has carried a huge burden in hosting Afghans for nearly four decades.

In an exclusive interview with VOA Urdu, Alvi defended Islamabad’s decision to expel Afghans living in Pakistan without proper documents.

He said giving refuge to citizens of the neighboring country had deeply affected his own country’s economy and culture.

“I think that it’s a huge burden for Pakistan. We have given refuge to 3.5 million people for 30, 40 years. They are our Afghan, Muslim brothers, and this deeply impacted our economy, our livelihood. Because when all of these people got jobs, Pakistan’s workforce is 80 to 100 million, and out of those, 3.5 million are Afghans.”

Pakistan is a country of over 240 million people. While the South Asian nation has struggled financially for years, it has a large undocumented or untaxed economy that Afghans also participate in as business owners, traders and laborers.

“It is said that the Kalashnikov culture here increased with the presence of Afghans,” Alvi said, referring to the mass inflow of weapons into Pakistan in the aftermath of the Soviet war in Afghanistan nearly three decades ago.

Pakistan hosts over 4 million Afghans of which roughly 1.7 million lack legal documents to stay. According to the U.N. High Commission for Refugees, the country is currently hosting around 1.4 million legally registered Afghan refugees and nearly 900,000 as documented economic migrants.

There is also a sizeable population of Afghans born in Pakistan to parents who fled war or poverty in the last four decades. However, many lack proper documents.

Citing security concerns, Pakistan in early October ordered people of all nationalities residing illegally in the country to leave voluntarily or face a crackdown after November 1. Since then, over 300,000 Afghans have left the country voluntarily, while a small fraction has been deported.

Alvi, who serves a largely ceremonial post, complained that the international community had not provided Pakistan with sufficient support to host one of the world’s largest refugee populations.

“The world makes promises to cooperate when refugees arrive, but nobody has given any cooperation,” he said.

Since the Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan in August 2021, nearly 700,000 Afghans arrived in Pakistan seeking refuge. Thousands among them are awaiting resettlement abroad.

In this time, Pakistan has also seen a dramatic rise in terror attacks. Islamabad accuses Afghan Taliban of providing a haven to the banned militant outfit Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, responsible for many of the attacks.

The de facto rulers in Kabul deny the charge and say Pakistan is blaming them for its internal “failure.”

Islamabad also claims that Afghan citizens were involved in 14 out of 24 terror attacks in recent months.

When asked if the push to expel Afghans was a retaliatory move against the Taliban’s alleged inaction against cross-border terrorism, Alvi called the two issues a “concurrent problem.”

“Pakistan is repeatedly telling the Afghan Taliban to not let infiltration [of terrorists] happen from their side. [That] the anti-state players should not act against us sitting on your side,” he said.

Alvi said he did not know why the Taliban have not alleviated Pakistan’s concerns but noted that military and diplomatic channels of communication are open.

VOA Urdu’s Ali Furqan contributed to this report.

Other Pakistan-Afghanistan News

  • Regional Countries Mulling Simultaneous Taliban Recognition, Pakistani Envoy Says
Posted in Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Refugees and Migrants, Taliban |

Taliban’s Suspicious Housing Developments Unfold in Ghazni

16th November, 2023 · admin

8am: Local sources in Ghazni report that the Taliban have initiated the construction of four townships in the central areas and districts of Nawa, Qarabagh, and Waghaz in this province. According to sources, the construction of these townships began six months ago. The most substantial of these townships, currently undergoing rapid development, is situated in the Nawa district of the province, receiving direct financial support from the Haqqani network. Concurrently, a township is being constructed in the center of Ghazni province, involving the forceful seizure of portions of land for the project, including sections of the Teachers’ Township. Sources in the Qarabagh district also claim that hundreds of acres of Hazara-owned lands in this district have been seized by the Taliban for the construction of a township. Additionally, another township is under construction in the Waghaz district for undisclosed purposes.

Nevertheless, sources have claimed that migrants, primarily families of members of the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), will be relocated to these townships. They assert that the simultaneous mass expulsion of migrants from Pakistan and the prior readiness of the Taliban for their relocation appear suspicious. However, the Taliban have not provided details regarding these claims.

Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Ethnic Issues, Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: ethnic cleansing, Ghazni, Land grabbing, Life under Taliban rule, Pashtun war on Hazaras |

Tolo News in Dari – November 16, 2023

16th November, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Suicide attack in Nangarhar kills one, injures another

16th November, 2023 · admin

Khaama: Local officials in Nangarhar province report that as a result of an explosion involving explosive materials in the vicinity of this province, one person has lost their life, and another individual has been injured. Abdul Basir Zabuli, the spokesperson for the Nangarhar provincial administration, has said in a statement that this incident occurred on Thursday near the Naghark Bridge in the Surkh Rod district of Nangarhar province. According to Mr. Zabuli, this incident occurred precisely at a moment when explosive materials had been transported within the body of an unidentified individual and detonated. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Civilian Injuries and Deaths, Security | Tags: Nangarhar, Taliban Security Failure |

Afghan Traders Seek The Release Of Stranded Imports In Pakistan

16th November, 2023 · admin

By RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
November 16, 2023

Afghan traders are asking Pakistan to release thousands of containers filled with imports stranded at the southern seaport of Karachi after authorities blocked their transit claiming the goods are being smuggled back into Pakistan after they arrive in Afghanistan.

Yunus Mohmand, the acting head of the Afghanistan Chamber of Commerce, said on November 16 that Pakistan’s actions are unjust. Islamabad claims it is losing millions of dollars in tax revenue because of the illegal smuggling as the goods are sent to Kabul duty-free.

“Creating such illegal obstacles for trade is having a terrible effect on the economy of both countries,” Mohmand told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi, noting that new additional taxes on the goods would crush traders.

Mohmand said that the imports contain electronics and perishable foodstuffs.

On November 14, the minister for the Taliban’s de facto Ministry for Industry and Commerce, Nooruddin Azizi, raised the issue with Jalil Abbas Jilani, Pakistan’s caretaker foreign minister.

“Hundreds of these containers have been parked for several months, while some have been stuck for more than a year,” a Taliban diplomat in the northwestern city of Peshawar told the AFP news agency.

He said Kabul is seeking to lessen the losses of Afghan importers.

Pakistan’s blockade of Afghan transit goods is one of several critical issues plaguing relations with neighboring Afghanistan.

Since early October, more than 300,000 Afghan refugees have returned to their country after Islamabad announced a drive to deport more than 1.7 million undocumented migrants, most of whom are Afghan.

Afghans and ruling Taliban officials have accused Pakistani police and other law enforcement agencies of widespread abuses, including arbitrary arrests, torture, bribes, and harassment of Afghans across the country.

To open alternative international trade routes for Afghanistan, the Taliban regime’s deputy prime minister, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, secured access to Iran’s southeastern Chabahar Port.

Since the turn of the century, successive Afghan governments have sought to establish Chabahar as an alternative port to Karachi for their land-locked nation.

Copyright (c) 2023. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.
Posted in Economic News, Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations |

Forty new emerald deposits found in Panjshir

16th November, 2023 · admin

Ariana: Mohammad Qasim Amiri, the head of the Mines and Petroleum Department in Panjshir said the deposits were found in Parian district. Amiri stated that approximately 1,250 emerald deposits have now been identified in the province. Since the Islamic Emirate [Taliban] took control of the country, local authorities in Panjshir have overseen the extraction and sale of an estimated $24.5 billion worth of emeralds. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Economic News, Taliban | Tags: emeralds, Panjshir, Taliban looting resources |

Detention of Ten Individuals in Parwan Province: Two Residents of Dara-e Ghorband Lost Their Lives Under Taliban Torture

16th November, 2023 · admin

8am: Local sources in Parwan province report that two residents of the province have lost their lives under torture by the Taliban in the group’s prison. Sources on Thursday, November 16, confirmed to Hasht-e Subh Daily that approximately two weeks ago, the Taliban detained ten individuals from the residents of Dara-e Fandaqistan in the Siahgird district of Parwan province on charges of “theft.” According to sources, three days ago, the Taliban handed over the dead bodies of two individuals to their families, revealing signs of torture on their bodies. This comes as the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) recently released a report stating that the number of prisoners in Taliban prisons has exceeded 17,000 by mid-September of this year. This figure indicates an increase in Taliban prisoners compared to 2022 when the average number of prisoners was 10,000. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Detain and torture by Taliban, Parwan |

Iranian official claims Taliban admits they should give Iran its water share from Helmand River

16th November, 2023 · admin

Ariana: Ali Salajegheh, the head of Iran’s department of environment, told reporters on Wednesday that for the first time, the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA) has acknowledged Iran’s water share should be released from the Helmand River. He said the IEA acknowledged this during the economic delegation’s recent visit to the country. “Fortunately, during the economic delegation’s visit by the Taliban (IEA) to Iran, we had a meeting, and for the first time, the Taliban accepted that Iran’s water rights should be respected in the Helmand River,” he said. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Economic News, Environmental News, Iran-Afghanistan Relations, Taliban | Tags: Helmand River |

Family Says Afghan Worker Killed, Body Burned By Employers In Turkey

16th November, 2023 · admin

By RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
November 15, 2023

The family of an Afghan migrant worker in Turkey has accused his employers of killing him and then burning his body to cover up their crime.

Speaking to RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi on November 15, Qamar Gul said her husband, Wazir Mohammad Nourtani, didn’t return from work in Turkey’s western Black Sea province of Zonguldak on November 9.

She said she reported his disappearance to the police on November 10 and “around noon the next day, they informed me that they had found a body.”

“When they showed me the body, it was my husband,” she said.

Nourtani, 50, worked in an illegal coal mine in Zonguldak. He was the sole breadwinner for his family of five.

According to reports in Turkish media, police have arrested six people in connection with his death, including the owners of the illegal mine where he worked.

The suspects, the reports say, have confessed to his murder after he fell unconscious while working. The owners allegedly didn’t take him to the hospital. Instead they killed him in an apparent bid to prevent their illegal mine from being discovered.

Police have not commented officially on the case.

“I want to ask them, why did they kill him?” Gul said, questioning why they didn’t take him to the hospital.

“Why did they set him on fire?” she added. “They broke his arms and legs and smashed his head.”

After living in Iran for two decades, Nourtani moved to neighboring Turkey earlier this year to escape Tehran’s ongoing crackdown on Afghan migrants.

He is not the first Afghan suspected of being killed in the country. There have been several reports of Afghans who entered Turkey from Iran being shot dead.

Turkey, like Iran and Pakistan, has begun to deport a large number of Afghans back to their country, with almost 4,000 leaving in recent weeks. Over the past month, some 400,000 Afghans have been repatriated from those two countries.

Turkey hosts more than 3.2 million registered Syrian refugees. Since the Taliban returned to power in August 2021, it has seen an increasing number of Afghans arriving via Iran.

Copyright (c) 2023. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.
Posted in Crime and Punishment, Refugees and Migrants, Turkey-Afghanistan Relations |

SIGAR reports a large percentage of US aid is being diverted to the Taliban

15th November, 2023 · admin

John Sopko

Ariana: The US Inspector General for the Reconstruction of Afghanistan (SIGAR) John Sopko said Tuesday the Islamic Emirate [Taliban] is diverting or otherwise benefitting from a considerable amount of U.S. assistance. Testifying at a hearing before the Committee on Foreign Affairs US House of Representatives, Sopko shared how US funds have been provided to or diverted by the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA) since the collapse of the former government in August 2021. He said: “SIGAR has found that Taliban (IEA) officials routinely pressure US partners to hire Taliban allies, insist that US partners contract with Taliban-affiliated companies, dictate which Afghans should receive US aid, demand payoffs from US partners before a project can begin, divert US food aid to Taliban soldiers, and tax recipients of aid once it is delivered. Click here to read more (external link).

Other Economic News

  • Artificial or Real Dollar Decline: Surge in Afghan Currency Value Does Not Signify Economic Boom
Posted in Economic News, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Secret alliance between Taliban and US, Secretly funding Taliban, Taliban stealing aid |
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