HRW asks Pakistan to stop forced return of Afghans

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  • Says Pakistani officials should not be ‘scapegoating’ Afghans because of Taliban’s atrocities in Peshawar
  • IOM reports 33,000 undocumented Afghans ‘spontaneously returned’ from Pakistan in a year

The Pakistan government should immediately order local authorities to stop pressuring registered refugees to return to Afghanistan, the Human Rights Watch (HRW) said Sunday.

The Pakistan government has an obligation to protect all Afghans in the country, including those not registered as refugees, from harassment and other abuses, the rights group said in a statement.

A recent increase in Afghans repatriating from Pakistan appears related to coercive pressure from local governments on Afghans to return to their country since the December 16, 2014 attack by the Pakistani Taliban splinter group Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP) on a school in Peshawar in north-western Pakistan. The attack left at least 148 dead – almost all of them children.

“Pakistani officials should not be scapegoating Afghans because of the Taliban’s atrocities in Peshawar,” said HRW Asia Deputy Director Phelim Kine. “It is inhumane, not to mention unlawful, to return Afghans to places they may face harm and not protect them from harassment and abuse.”

Nine times as many Afghan refugees were repatriated from Pakistan in January 2015 as in December 2014, according to the UN refugee agency (UNHCR). UNHCR analysis of the returns indicated that a significant percentage of these 3,829 returns were coercive. Nearly all of the refugees returned from three Pakistani provinces – Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Azad Kashmir, and Punjab – where an increase in arrests, detentions, and evictions of Afghans were reported during the same period.

Those registered as refugees possess Proof of Registration (PoR) issued by the Pakistani government, with the support of UNHCR. Although UNHCR reports a decrease in the number of PoR cardholders returning to Afghanistan since the last week of January 2015, International Organization for Migration (IOM) figures show a comparable rate of returns of undocumented Afghans in the first two weeks of February compared with January.

The overwhelming majority of Afghans who have left Pakistan since December 16, 2014, have not been formally deported, but are rather categorized as “spontaneous returns.” The IOM reported that more than 33,000 undocumented Afghans had “spontaneously returned” from Pakistan from the beginning of 2014 through the first two weeks of February 2015, a 155 percent increase from all spontaneous returns through the end of 2014.

The rate of spontaneous returns of undocumented Afghans increased from an average of 59 a day in 2014 to 749 in the first six weeks of 2015. An IOM official told HRW that many of the unregistered Afghan returnees reported that they had left Pakistan to escape harassment following the Peshawar attack.

In December 2014, the Pakistani government specifically assured Afghan refugees that the Peshawar attack would not prompt any official reprisals.

The Ministry of States and Frontier Regions pledged that the government would “maintain its traditional hospitality” toward Afghan refugees. Despite these assurances, since December 16 there have been numerous reports of government and public harassment and intimidation against the country’s Afghan population.

Those reports include accounts that police have threatened Afghans with arrest unless they leave the country immediately.

The Hangu district government in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa announced on February 11, 2015, that it would require all registered Afghan refugees to relocate to a government-supervised camp and that it would deport any undocumented Afghan citizens.

Afghanistan currently produces the second-largest number of refugees in the world, after Syria. Pakistan has hosted about 1.5 million registered Afghan refugees for more than 30 years, while another 1 million unregistered Afghans live in the country.

The Pakistani government has legitimate authority to deport undocumented migrants but should give those who might fear persecution upon return the opportunity to lodge asylum claims, and otherwise treat them with dignity.

“Pakistan’s government is tarnishing the country’s well-deserved reputation for hospitality toward refugees by tolerating the punitive and potentially unlawful coercive repatriation of Afghan refugees,” Kine said.

“The government needs to defend the rights of its Afghan population and ensure that local authorities aren’t carrying out vindictive reprisals for an atrocity the Afghan refugees bear no responsibility for.”

2 COMMENTS

  1. The United States government needs to take care of the Afghan refugees.
    America’s war on terror created these refugees and now they’re crossing over into Pakistan and turning to a life of street crime and terrorism that the Pakistani people are forced to put up with (as if if we didn’t have enough problems of our own).

    America hasn’t even paid us completely for fighting their war for them,neither have they repatriated the 2 million internally displaced Pakistanis who were displaced as a direct result of America’s war on terror spilling over into Pakistan from Afghanistan. Don’t even get me started on how much money America owes us for infrastructure and economic damages incurred by Pakistan as a direct result of American involvement in the region.

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