By Ali Sukhanver
Ali SukhanverMigration to safer lands has ever been a dominating feature of human history. People who migrate into a territory are called immigrants, while at the departure point they are called emigrants while populations displaced by immigration are called refugees. Another terms used for immigrants is asylum seeker.
A
person who is outside his home country just because he has suffered or feared
persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, or political opinion is
called asylum seeker. Immigrants always prove a huge burden over the economy of
the country they migrate to and usually such people never get the status of
first grade citizens in the countries they strife to settle in but in Pakistan
the situation seems altogether different. Here the refugees enjoy all possible
liberties and all possible facilities and sometimes the refugees are so
powerful that they seem dominating over the local population. At present in
Pakistan, the term ‘Refugees’ is specifically used for the Afghan immigrants
whose migration into Pakistan started somewhere in 1980 during Soviet war in
Afghanistan. According to various survey reports more than 1.7 million Afghan
refugees were living in Pakistan by the end of year 2012. Most of them were
living in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Federally Administered Tribal Areas and
Northwestern Balochistan. In 2013 Pakistan was home to an estimated 2.6 million
Afghans and among these 1.7 millions, around 1.6 million were registered
refugees and the rest were living undocumented and unaccounted for along the
two countries’ shared border. There are two categories of the Afghan refugees
living in Pakistan, the registered ones and the unregistered ones. Though the
government of Pakistan is providing all possible help and support to the
registered refugees in collaboration with the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees but the actual problem is because of the refugees who are living
in Pakistan without any information and registration. Such illegal Afghan
Refugees have become a painful burden on the limited resources of Pakistan. The
government of Pakistan had been continuously requesting the Karzai government
to make proper arrangements for repatriation of these refugees to Afghanistan
but this request was never taken serious. However a tripartite agreement was
signed in 2003 between the governments of Pakistan and Afghanistan and the U.N.
High Commissioner for Refugees which held the UNHCR responsible to assist the
repatriation of Refugees who wanted to return until 2005; later, the agreement
was extended to March 2006 and then to December 2006. At present the final date
for the repatriation of Unregistered Refugees to Afghanistan is 31st December
2015. In the first week of this January, a high level meeting on policy
recommendations for repatriation and registration of Afghan refugees residing
in Pakistan decided that there will be no extension in deadline of return of
Afghan refugees beyond 31 December 2015. The meeting also decided that those
refugees living in urban areas will be sent back to refugee camps and for this
purpose new sites for refugee camps will also be established.
Illegal and unregistered Afghan refugees are creating a lot of problems for Pakistan regarding terrorism and law and order situation. There are countless people who claim to be Afghans but in fact they are not. Every day hundreds of Afghan people cross the Durand Line without any papers or permission. Since these Afghans have a lot of resemblance with the local people living in Pakistani area along the Durand Line, it becomes very difficult for the law enforcement agencies to put a check on them. These illegal ‘trespassers’ so many times try to settle themselves in refugee camps also. The situation is becoming grave and serious day by day. When the law enforcement agencies take any action against such illegal refugees, the government of Pakistan has to face a lot of resistance and opposition from the so-called human-rights organizations. These organizations defame the government of Pakistan by blaming that the Afghan refugees are being harassed by the law enforcement agencies of Pakistan in the name of the National Action Plan. A spokesman of the Ministry of Interior has recently rejected all such blames and allegations by saying that in line with the tripartite agreement between Pakistan, Afghanistan and UNHCR, no action is being taken against any Afghan refugee, all legal action is against those individuals who do not possess CNICs or other document which can authenticate their antecedents. Pakistan has always been very helpful and supportive to Afghanistan and the Afghan nation. It has no ill-will or grudge against any Afghan national. But at the same time it is the right of the government of Pakistan to keep a vigilant eye on those who are involved in terrorist activities either they are from Afghanistan or any other country.
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