AFGHAN REFUGEES ARE LEAVING BUT PAKISTAN AUTHORITIES ARE SPOILING THEY LEFT BEHIND
Since the crackdown
began, Afghan refugees are desperate to sell off their assets and leave the
country — only to find that their Pakistani 'friends' will take full advantage
of their vulnerabilities.
Habib Ullah, now 40,
spent the better part of his life building a business in Pakistan. For the past
several years, he ran a vegetable shop in Peshawar, which not only provided sustenance
for his wife and 13 children, but also allowed him to save some money for
difficult times.
His savings didn’t help
though, given the circumstances he now finds himself in.
“Due to the
circumstances, I had no choice but to sell all my possessions at significantly
reduced prices. Many people had also taken a loan from me but I was unable to
get back what they owed, resulting in another loss of around Rs300,000.”
Officially, the
Government of Pakistan has only allowed each family to take Rs.50000 with
them across the border. With this meagre amount, Habib Ullah says he’s really
at a loss on how he is expected to restart his life in a strange land where he
has nothing. He wishes the Afghans, who are being forced to leave Pakistan,
were permitted to keep their earned goods which they have acquired through hard
labour over a lifetime.
On October 3, the
Government of Pakistan said that an estimated 1.7 million undocumented, the
vast majority of them Afghans, were living in different parts of the country.
It then ordered everyone who did not have documentation to leave the country or
risk being forcibly evicted. These unregistered migrants are often referred to
as ‘aliens’, who have no form of identification, including either a POR (Proof
of Residency) card or an ACC (Afghan Citizen Card).
The POR cards were introduced in collaboration with the UNHCR and were issued to over 2.15 million Afghan refugees between 2006 and 2007. These cards were valid for two years, after which they would have to be renewed every two years. In 2017, the Government of Pakistan, in collaboration with the Afghan government, introduced the ACCs, which were to be issued to those who could not obtain the PoR cards for some reason. In January 2022, the UNHCR estimated the number of ACC holders to be around around 840,000.
The purpose of both these
cards was to officially recognise the holders as refugees and grant them
partial rights in Pakistan’s healthcare and economic sectors.
Realistically speaking,
these documents are a mere formality. In 2022,an analysis of the Afghab
refugees market system found that the POR and ACC cardholders could not
legally work. Although POR cardholders could open a bank account, the said
account would need to be renewed every two years. Moreover, the holders of
these cards were not able to open or operate a business in their own name.
Even worse off were the
undocumented Afghan nationals, who did not have the facility to open bank
accounts, launch businesses, or find work in the formal sector of the economy.
Hence, they would opt for informal or undocumented labour to sustain
themselves, working doubly hard at menial jobs to make ends meet.
With the October 31
deadline having expired, hundreds of thousands of Afghan refugees like Habib
Ullah find themselves in a dilemma. Do they give up their entire life’s work
and go back to a country they know nothing about? Or do they risk being
deported to that same country?
With law enforcement
agencies rounding up Afghan nationals and transporting them across the border,over
250,000 Afghan refugees have been repatriated or deported from across the
country. But this begs the question: who benefits from the businesses and
assets they leave behind?
BUSSINESS
OF THE UNDOCUMENTED
From the outset,
undocumented Afghan nationals could not run a business or make any monetary
transactions via formal banking channels. In such cases, they would hire or
solicit the help of Pakistani ‘front men’ or a person of trust. The business,
hence, would be registered in the front man’s name and the same would be used
for any banking transactions or documentation to purchase land or any other
assets.
“Most Afghan refugees who
cross the border into Pakistan belong to the lower middle class”, so they do
not possess any qualifications or even a tertiary level education, explained
Sadiq Ullah Kakar, the legal adviser for the Afghan consulate in Karachi. What
they bring are generational skills, incorporating them into the informal
sectors of Pakistan’s economy. This, however, puts them at risk of exploitation
through delayed/ low wages or being forced to work in unsafe conditions.
As per study
by the Asia Displacement Solutions Platform (ADSP)2019 a joint initiative of
the Danish Refugee Council, International Rescue Committee, and the Norwegian
Refugee Council, found that the majority of Afghan refugees work in the
‘informal sector of the undocumented economy’. This includes the transport
sector, tnadoor shops, garbage collection, picking scraps to
be sold or as daily wage labourers at construction sites. In recent years, some
enterprising Afghan nationals also became involved in the cattle/dairy
industry, bringing cattle from remote areas to be sold in city centres and even
working as butchers on Eid.
Sharbat Khan, who has
lived in Punjab’s Chakwal district for almost four decades, expressed
disappointment with the government’s decision to prevent the refugees from taking
their cattle to Afghanistan. “First, the government forces us to leave our
home, where we lived for the past 40 years, and now they forbid us from taking
our cattle,” he lamented.
The move is especially
difficult for those like him, who rely on cattle farming as their primary
source of income. According to Sharbat, while living in Pakistan, he was
involved in the sale of dairy products and made considerable investments in
cattle. The new mandate has, however, compelled him to sell his livestock at a
significant loss — each head of cattle that used to sell for Rs400,000 is now
selling for Rs100,000. “The cattle were our entire source of income, so losing
them was like losing a family member,” he sighed.
According to Abbas Khan,
the Chief Commissioner for Afghan Refugees, the government’s policy towards
illegal migrants is very clear: individuals found residing illegally in the
country must be repatriated to their home countries. Moreover, he said, people who
are undocumented and have invested in property or businesses in Pakistan do not
have legal cover for the assets because their presence in the country is
unlawful, making their property and business activities illegal too.
EXPLOITATION OF REFUGEES
Alamzeb, a 52-year-old
who has lived in Quetta for 30 years and owns a shoe business, bemoaned the
difficulties he is facing. Over the last month, he has sold most of his
inventory, worth Rs1.5 million for almost half the price.
“We never harmed anyone
and have worked hard to make a living. However, the persistent pressure from
the police has pushed us to leave our home by tomorrow. Initially, they would
seek sums in bribe ranging from Rs8,000 to Rs10,000, but now even that won’t
do.”
The decision is
especially tough for Alamzeb, however, who says that on the one hand, the
police regularly come knocking on his door to harass his family, while on the
other, he sees no future for his family in Afghanistan. For now, he says, he
may purchase a tent or seek assistance from relatives in Afghanistan, but they
do not expect any help from the Afghanistan government.
Over the years, Pakistan
has hosted over 3.7 million refugees only 1.4 of whom were formally registered with
the first major influx following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1978,
and a relatively smaller one following the fall of Kabul in 2021. Over the
years, authorities estimate that hundreds of thousands of undocumented refugees
have settled in the country and set up elaborate businesses.
After the government
decided to expel the refugees, those who had any stakes in Pakistan hurried to
sell off their assets. Hafeezullah, the owner of a restaurant in Afghan Basti
had bought his restaurant for Rs3 million some years ago. He says he is ready
to sell it off for as little as Rs1m but can’t find a buyer — they all want him
to lower the asking price further.
Mohammad Asif, who lived
in Machar Colony, sold his shop for Rs0.3m — he had bought it for double the
amount. When asked why he didn’t want a better offer, he sighed: “it was sheer
helplessness”. Asif needs to leave the country urgently as he fears being
arrested by the police.
Often, as a last resort,
Afghans are selling their businesses and properties to their trusted ‘frontmen’
at lower rates. The pattern was evident in our conversations with several
Afghan refugees, who narrated stories of relatives or acquaintances selling off
their assets at throwaway prices in their hurry to leave the country before
they were forcibly evicted.
The iconic Al-Asif
Square, a block of apartments located off the Karachi-Hyderabad motorway, has
been for years dominated by Afghans, earning it the pseudonym ‘mini-Kabul’. The
area is dotted with shops and restaurants selling Afghan delicacies and
traditional clothing, besides other wares.
Since the crackdown, however, many of the shops have been shut and the Pakistani locals, including the ‘front men’ who helped the Afghans document their properties, are brutally extorting them, says Asif. His own paternal cousin bought a plot in the area for Rs5.2m some years ago, but had to sell it off for Rs1.6m.
Then there are other
Afghan strongholds such as Sohrab Goth and Machar Colony, where properties are
being bought off from their residents at throwaway prices.
But their troubles don’t
end here.
Amarnath left Pakistan
through the Chaman border with his family of six. But he cursed the
transporters’ wickedness for inflating their service charges. It cost him
Rs120,000 to transport his family from Karachi to Quetta — a trip that would
normally cost less than half the amount.
LOAN PAYMENTS.
With the vast majority of
Afghan refugees unable to operate a bank account, they would save up whatever
they could in cash. If they ran a business, many of their clientele would
expect them to extend a line of credit — again, all of these transactions would
happen through verbal agreements based on mutual trust.
Now, as they prepare to
leave, they have been faced with the uphill task of getting their dues back.
Bashar Khan, an undocumented Afghan refugee has a total of Rs5.2m owed to him.
His clients from across the country are simply not paying up.
“They are not refusing to
pay, but delaying the process by saying, ‘I’ll give you later LAALA,”
said Khan. Since the deadline for him to leave has officially expired, if he
threatens his debtors they may report him to the police who will throw him in
the holding cell and ultimately deport him.

Many others like Bashar
Khan are being wronged by their debtors who are Pakistanis and are aware of
their situation. “I have come across cases where if an Afghan has loaned Rs4m
to a Pakistani, out of helplessness he can only ask for half of the amount back,”
said Kakar, the legal expert.
Ironically, the same
applies to documented refugees too. Abdul Dawood, a documented Afghan refugee
approached Kakar for his legal help since three different people owe him a
cumulative sum of Rs30m. They refused to pay him back, emboldened by the
vulnerable situation of Afghan refugees under the current crackdown.
After Kakar briefs the
legal procedure to him, Dawood realises that a civil case takes between one to
two years in court — a timeline he cannot afford. Dawood is also in a weaker
position, since he believes they can frame him by bribing the police who will
readily arrest him for being an Afghan refugee, documented or not. So he is
ready to accept whatever they will give him — but they want to give nothing at
all.
Comments
Post a Comment