ֱ

Pakistanis divided as Afghan migrants face expulsion under new policy

Pakistanis divided as Afghan migrants face expulsion under new policy
Afghan refugees due for deportation to Afghanistan arrive at a holding center to undergo biometric verification by the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA), near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in Chaman on April 8, 2025. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 09 April 2025

Pakistanis divided as Afghan migrants face expulsion under new policy

Pakistanis divided as Afghan migrants face expulsion under new policy
  • Pakistan has asked all “illegal foreigners” and Afghan Citizen Card holders to leave or face deportation from April 1
  • Move is part of larger deportation drive that began in November 2023 and has seen over 900,000 Afghans expelled

ISLAMABAD: As Pakistan intensifies its campaign to expel thousands of Afghan migrants, opinions in Islamabad remain divided, according to interviews with residents.
Earlier this year, Pakistan’s interior ministry asked all “illegal foreigners” and holders of Afghan Citizen Cards — a document launched in 2017 to grant temporary legal status to Afghan refugees — to leave the country before Mar. 31, warning that they would otherwise be deported from April 1. The move is part of a larger repatriation drive of foreign citizens that began in November 2023, with over 900,000 Afghans expelled from Pakistan since.
While 19-year-old student Rubab Iffat called the deportations “not right,” others like teacher Pervaiz Akhtar supported the government’s decision, saying Afghans were against Pakistan and were behind terror attacks in the country. The government in Kabul denies Afghanistan is to blame for Pakistan’s security problems. 
“Even on social media, they [Afghans] are against Pakistan ... They make their living here, but they are against us,” Akhtar said. 
“If you look overall, even locally, if you ask someone what Afghans say about us, they are against our country. Terrorism is also being carried out from there [Afghanistan] so it is justified that they leave. And they should go by all means, their country is Afghanistan.”
But Iffat said the government was not “doing the right thing” by expelling Afghans:
“Because they have been living here [Pakistan] for a long time and their home is here now, their children are studying here, so this is their country too. They should be given the same rights as us.”
Meanwhile, Afghanistan-bound trucks have been piling up outside Pakistan migrant camps as pressure to leave mounts.
In a migrant camp in the southwestern border town of Chaman, Afghan migrant Ismail prepared to return to his home country, leaving behind an “unfinished” life after a decade in Pakistan.
“I had a stable job, I had found stability,” he said, standing in front of rows of loaded trucks bound for Afghanistan. “Then the government told us we had to leave.”
Ghulam Hazrat said he had to leave behind his house and business and in the days leading up to leaving Karachi where he has lived for years, he had faced harassment from police.
“We were harassed every day. They didn’t even spare us on the streets and threw us straight into jail,” Hazrat added.
“Because of all this, we became very desperate and decided to leave Karachi [for Afghanistan].”


Faisalabad stages international cricket after 17 years for Pakistan-South Africa ODIs

Faisalabad stages international cricket after 17 years for Pakistan-South Africa ODIs
Updated 03 November 2025

Faisalabad stages international cricket after 17 years for Pakistan-South Africa ODIs

Faisalabad stages international cricket after 17 years for Pakistan-South Africa ODIs
  • Since international cricket returned to Pakistan in 2015, Karachi, Lahore, Rawalpindi and Multan have hosted teams
  • But Faisalabad was overlooked due to a lack of proper facilities, which have improved over the last couple of years

FAISALABAD: International cricket returns to Faisalabad after 17 years when new ODI captain Shaheen Shah Afridi leads Pakistan in three matches against an under-strength South Africa from Tuesday.

Iqbal Stadium last hosted an ODI in 2008, before the attack on Sri Lanka's team bus the following year forced Pakistan to play home matches in the United Arab Emirates for six years.

Since international cricket gradually returned to Pakistan in 2015, major cities like Karachi, Lahore, Rawalpindi and Multan have hosted foreign teams. But Faisalabad was overlooked due to the lack of proper facilities, which have improved over the last couple of years.

“It is exciting to see international cricket return to Faisalabad,” Afridi said on Monday. “The team played good cricket in the T20 series and we aim to carry that momentum into the ODIs.”

Pakistan drew the Test series against South Africa 1-1, and defeated the Proteas in the T20s 2-1 after winning back-to-back matches in Lahore.

Pakistan hasn’t impressed in ODIs this year, which led to Afridi replacing Mohammad Rizwan as the skipper. Pakistan lost the triangular series final to New Zealand, missed the semifinals of the Champions Trophy it hosted, and lost in the West Indies 2-1.

Afridi led Pakistan in a T20 series against New Zealand last year but was sacked after losing to the Black Caps 4-1.

“Our job is to ... fulfil the responsibility given to us,” Afridi said. “We respect the decision of the (Pakistan Cricket Board) and now it’s up to me to lead from the front in the ODIs.”

Pakistan has a full-strength squad with Afridi complemented by fast bowlers Naseem Shah and Haris Rauf. Also, T20 captain Fakhar Zaman returns along with Babar Azam, who scored a match-winning 68 in the final T20 on Saturday.

South Africa was without injured captain Temba Bavuma and seven other front-line white-ball players.

The stand-in skipper was Matthew Breetzke, who made a stunning ODI debut during the triangular series in Pakistan when he scored 150 against New Zealand in Lahore.

Quinton de Kock has reversed his 2023 ODI retirement and Tony de Zorzi was their only century-maker during the Test series in Pakistan.

“We are lacking the core group of ODI players that we usually have,” Breetzke said. “It offers opportunity for the younger guys to step up.”

The other two ODIs will also be in Faisalabad on Thursday and Saturday.

 


Saudi transport minister vows to boost collaboration as Pakistan opens major maritime expo

Saudi transport minister vows to boost collaboration as Pakistan opens major maritime expo
Updated 03 November 2025

Saudi transport minister vows to boost collaboration as Pakistan opens major maritime expo

Saudi transport minister vows to boost collaboration as Pakistan opens major maritime expo
  • The global exhibition’s second edition will run from Nov. 3 to Nov. 6 and will feature 178 exhibitors
  • It will provide opportunities to maritime industry to display products and develop business relations

KARACHI: ֱ’s Minister of Transport and Logistics Services Saleh Al-Jasser on Monday attended the Pakistan International Maritime Expo and Conference (PIMEC) in Karachi as the guest of honor, hoping to boost collaboration at the four-day event showcasing Pakistan’s maritime potential.

The global exhibition’s second edition will run from Nov. 3 to 6 and will feature 178 exhibitors — including 28 international firms and 150 local organizations — as well as 133 delegates from Europe, Asia, the Middle East, North and South America.

The event will be featuring business-to-business and business-to-government meetings, signing of various agreements and an 'International Maritime Conference on Harnessing Blue Economy Potential for Sustainable Development.'

Pakistan Naval Chief Admiral Naveed Ashraf welcomed the guest of honor and Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal, who was the chief guest at the opening ceremony at Expo Center, Karachi.

"I am very honored to visit Pakistan and attend this very important event where I have the opportunity to see how developed is the maritime sector and also to discuss collaboration," the Saudi minister said, adding the purpose of his visit is to "improve connectivity between the two countries, exchange ideas and information and experiences for us to grow together and prosper together."

The exhibition will provide opportunities to the maritime industry, both in the public and private sectors, to display products and develop business relationships, according to its website.

It intends to provide a platform to bring together stakeholders from diverse maritime industries of hydrocarbon extraction, coastal development and shipping, port infrastructure, fisheries, marine tourism, offshore renewable energy, aquaculture, seabed mining, marine biotechnology and others to exploit the ocean’s untapped resources.

The four-day event is being held under the patronage of Pakistan Navy and the Ministry of Maritime Affairs and aims to foster global cooperation in blue economy.

"The organization of this maritime expo by Pakistan Navy to create awareness about the country’s maritime resources is commendable," said Iqbal, who also unveiled a commemorative stamp and visited various stalls at the expo.

 


Pakistan’ s ceasefire with Afghanistan will be ‘over’ if cross-border attacks continue — military

Pakistan’ s ceasefire with Afghanistan will be ‘over’ if cross-border attacks continue — military
Updated 03 November 2025

Pakistan’ s ceasefire with Afghanistan will be ‘over’ if cross-border attacks continue — military

Pakistan’ s ceasefire with Afghanistan will be ‘over’ if cross-border attacks continue — military
  • The two countries engaged in fierce fighting last month after Pakistan hit what it called Pakistani Taliban-affiliated targets in Afghanistan
  • Both sides are due to meet in Istanbul this week to firm up a truce reached on Oct. 19 but Pakistani officials say their patience is 'wearing thin'

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will consider a ceasefire with Afghanistan “over” even if a single cross-border attack occurred inside Pakistan, the Pakistani military said on Monday, with the two sides due to meet again in Istanbul this week.

Tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan have surged in recent months following an uptick in attacks, mainly by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) inside Pakistan. Islamabad has repeatedly accused the Afghan Taliban of sheltering the TTP, an allegation Kabul denies.

The two countries engaged in fierce fighting last month after Pakistan hit what it called TTP-affiliated targets in Afghanistan. Both sides reached a ceasefire in Doha on Oct. 19 and are due to meet in Istanbul on Nov. 6 to finalize a vigilance mechanism, but Pakistani military officials say their patience is "wearing thin."

Lieutenant General Ahmad Sharif Chaudhry, a Pakistani military spokesperson, toldnangroup of journalists in Rawalpindi that the country’s armed forces had eliminated 1,667 militants so far this year, including "128 Afghan nationals," while 582 army personnel had been killed during the anti-militancy operations.

“If even a single terrorist incident happens in Pakistan from Afghan soil [now], the ceasefire will be considered over,” Sharif said adding that up to 60 percent of "TTP infiltrators were Afghan nationals."

“There have been three infiltration attempts by the TTP from Afghanistan in the past month — all foiled.”

Hours later, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the Pakistani military's media wing, said they had killed three Pakistani Taliban militants in two separate engagements near the border with Afghanistan. Two of the deceased militants were identified as Afghan nationals, it added.

Chaudhry said Pakistan participated in the recent Doha and Istanbul talks with an “open mind” and a single demand that cross-border militancy must come to an end.

“Pakistan has always given peace a chance,” he said. “We are not using force unnecessarily. [We are using] only where it is needed. But we will never talk to terrorists. We will talk to Afghanistan, not to those who kill our people.”

He said the army had stepped up operations in the Pakistan-Afghanistan border regions, particularly in Khyber and Tirah valleys, where militant networks are financed through narcotics and smuggling.

“Each acre of poppy yields up to Rs2.5 million ($8,841) and terrorist groups collect usher tax from locals,” the military spokesman said. “Drugs produced in Nangarhar are trafficked into Pakistan, funding the Afghan Taliban and TTP while destroying our youth.”

There was no immediate response from Afghanistan to the Pakistani military spokesman's statement.

‘UNFULFILLED PROMISES’

Sharif criticized the Taliban government in Kabul for failing to honor the Doha agreement with the United States (US).

“They promised a representative government and Loya Jirga. None of that has happened. This is not a representative government, it is a regime,” he said, adding that the Afghan people “do not support terrorism.”

The official alleged that the Afghan Taliban regime was relocating TTP fighters into civilian areas in Afghanistan to use residents as “human shields.”

“Pakistan has demanded the handover of TTP leaders Noor Wali Mehsud and Bashir Zeb,” he shared. “Why are they being protected there? Once handed over, we will deal with them under Pakistani law.”

US DRONE ATTACKS

The Pakistani military spokesman dismissed Afghan and Indian media reports, which suggested that US drones were operating from Pakistan to attack Afghanistan.

“These are completely false. Pakistan has no such agreement with any country,” he said, accusing hostile social media networks of spreading propaganda.

He said Pakistan’s security “is in our own hands, not in Afghanistan’s.”

“Security is not something you beg for, it comes from strength. Our security will not be dictated by Kabul. It will come from Islamabad, Karachi and Lahore,” he said.

Asked about the possibility of large-scale operations in the northwest, he clarified that the military preferred intelligence-based actions, which were producing "better results."

About the border security, he said Pakistan had fenced much of the 2,600-kilometer frontier with Afghanistan but called it “the only border in the world guarded by one side.”

He urged reciprocal measures from Kabul to curb infiltration and smuggling.

NUCLEAR TESTS

To a question about US President Donald Trump’s remarks on Pakistan’s nuclear test, he said that every nation has the sovereign right to take measures for its security.

"Pakistan can conduct tests or adopt any steps necessary to ensure the reliability of its deterrence," Chaudhry said.

Trump last week announced he had instructed the Department of Defense to “immediately” restart testing of US nuclear weapons.

“Russia’s testing, and China’s testing, but they don’t talk about it. You know, we’re an open society. We’re different. We talk about it. We have to talk about it,” Trump said in reference to nuclear weapons during an appearance on the CBS News programme '60 Minutes.'

“We’re going to test because they test and others test. And certainly, North Korea’s been testing. Pakistan’s been testing.”

None of the countries Trump mentioned has openly conducted nuclear weapon tests in recent years. He did not provide any evidence to support his claims either.


Authorities forecast rain, snowfall in Pakistan’s northwest on Nov. 4-5, urge caution

Authorities forecast rain, snowfall in Pakistan’s northwest on Nov. 4-5, urge caution
Updated 03 November 2025

Authorities forecast rain, snowfall in Pakistan’s northwest on Nov. 4-5, urge caution

Authorities forecast rain, snowfall in Pakistan’s northwest on Nov. 4-5, urge caution
  • District administrations asked to clean drainage systems, timely update local population, tourists and travelers
  • Farmers, livestock-keepers directed to shift crops and animals to safe places, disaster management authority says

PESHAWAR: Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province is expected to witness rain and snowfall on Nov 4-5, the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) said on Monday, urging resident and travelers to exercise caution.

The PDMA has predicted rain and snowfall in Dir, Chitral, Swat, Kohistan, Kolai Palace, Shangla, Battagram, Mansehra, Abbottabad, Haripur, Buner, Malakand, Bajaur and Mohmand districts.

Similarly, Kohat, Peshawar, Charsadda, Nowshera, Mardan, Swabi, Khyber, Orakzai, Kurram, Hangu, Karak, Bannu, Lakki Marwat, North and South Waziristan, Tank and Dera Ismail Khan are likely to receive rain.

The PDMA said it has asked district administrations to remain alert and make arrangements in advance to prevent any untoward incidents during the forecast period.

“There is a risk of road closure due to rain and landslides in Abbottabad, Battagram, Buner, Upper and Lower Chitral, Upper and Lower Dir, Khyber, Upper and Lower Kohistan, Kulgam, Kurram, Malakand, Mansehra, Mohmand, Orakzai, Shangla, Swat, Torghar and mountainous areas of North Waziristan,” it said.

“There is a risk of damage to vulnerable houses, electricity poles, advertisement boards and solar panels due to rains.”

The authority asked district administrations to clean drainage systems and provide timely information to the local population, tourists and travelers.

“Farmers, livestock keepers are directed to shift crops and animals to safe places,” it added.

Earlier this year, KP reported the highest 509 of 1,037 deaths from rain, deluges, land- and mudslides during the monsoon season that began in late June, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA).

Scientists have blamed frequent, increasingly erratic weather events in Pakistan on human-driven climate change.


Digital payments account for 88 percent retail transactions amid Pakistan’s push for digitization

Digital payments account for 88 percent retail transactions amid Pakistan’s push for digitization
Updated 03 November 2025

Digital payments account for 88 percent retail transactions amid Pakistan’s push for digitization

Digital payments account for 88 percent retail transactions amid Pakistan’s push for digitization
  • Pakistan has traditionally been a cash-dominated market where a significant portion of transactions, particularly in informal sector
  • Retail payments reached 9.1 billion transactions worth $2.164 trillion in 2024-25 and witnessed an increase of 12 percent in value year on year

KARACHI: Digital payments accounted for 88 percent of retail transactions in Pakistan in the outgoing fiscal year, the Pakistani central bank said on Monday, amid Islamabad’s push for digitization to transform its $400 billion economy.

The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) said this in its Annual Report on Payment Systems, which presented a comprehensive analysis of current payment ecosystem, key evolving trends shaping the payment landscapes, and notable developments in fiscal year 2024-25 that ended in June.

The report illustrated swift expansion of Pakistan’s payments landscape over the past fiscal year, catalyzed by regulatory initiatives, the expansion of digital infrastructure, and strong consumer adoption of mobile and Internet-based platforms.

“Retail payments registered robust growth, reaching 9.1 billion transactions worth PKR612 trillion ($2.164 trillion), and witnessing an increase of 38 percent in terms of volume and 12 percent in value on a YoY [year-on-year] basis,” the SBP said, adding that digital channels continued to demonstrate steady momentum as Pakistanis increasingly embraced mobile apps, Internet banking and e-money wallets.

“Payments through digital channels accounted for 88 percent of all retail transactions, growing from 78 percent in FY23 and 85 percent in FY24. Mobile banking apps led with over 6.2 billion transactions, witnessing growth of 52 percent, while Internet banking portals processed 297 million transactions, up 33 percent from the previous year.”

Pakistan has traditionally been a cash-dominated market where a significant portion of transactions, particularly in the informal sector, were conducted in cash. Officials say many of these transactions were aimed at avoiding taxes.

In recent years, the SBP has taken steps to ensure a transition toward a more cashless economy so that transactions become easier, transparent and traceable. The South Asian country is also developing digital identities of all its citizens to enable secure and efficient payments, Pakistani state media reported in August.

In the last fiscal year, the central bank said, e-money wallet apps exhibited the fastest growth trajectory, with both transaction volume and value doubling during the year, despite their limited share in the overall number of mobile banking apps.

“This reflects growing consumer trust in electronic money institutions as a potential key driver of inclusion and adoption. This transformation was supported by significant strengthening of the underlying infrastructure, which provided a solid foundation for sustained growth and operational efficiency,” the report read.

“Raast, Pakistan’s instant payment platform, recorded more than a two-fold increase in both transaction count and value, establishing itself as a cornerstone of the digital ecosystem.”

The industry’s offering on Raast Person-to-Merchant (P2M) services marked beginning of a transformative journey toward advancing digital inclusivity, reducing reliance on costly infrastructure, enabling faster settlements, and fostering a transparent digital trail that enhances access to formal financial services, according to the report.

“The point-of-sale network expanded to 195,849 terminals across 159,284 merchant locations, enabling nearly one million daily card payments, compared to 0.7 million in the last fiscal year,” the report read.

“At the same time, e-commerce payments continue to show inclination toward account and wallet-based channels, which represents 93 percent of online transactions. The ATM network also grew by more than 7 percent to 20,341 machines, with each handling an average of 140 transactions on a daily basis.”