Current:Home > StocksAfghans fleeing Pakistan lack water, food and shelter once they cross the border, aid groups say -FundWay
Afghans fleeing Pakistan lack water, food and shelter once they cross the border, aid groups say
View
Date:2025-04-14 01:21:57
ISLAMABAD (AP) — Afghans fleeing Pakistan to avoid arrest and deportation are sleeping in the open, without proper shelter, food, drinking water and toilets once they cross the border to their homeland, aid agencies said Sunday.
Hundreds of thousands of Afghans have left Pakistan in recent weeks as authorities pursue foreigners they say are in the country illegally, going door-to-door to check migrants’ documentation. Pakistan set Oct.31 as a deadline to leave the country or else they’d be arrested as part of a new anti-migrant crackdown.
Afghans leave Pakistan from two main border crossings, Torkham and Chaman. The Taliban have set up camps on the other side for people to stay in while they wait to be moved to their place of origin in Afghanistan.
Aid agencies said Torkham has no proper shelter. There is limited access to drinking water, no heating source other than open fires, no lighting, and no toilets. There is open defecation and poor hygiene. U.N. agencies and aid groups are setting up facilities with thousands of people entering Afghanistan every day.
Kayal Mohammad lived in the northwest Pakistani city of Peshawar for 17 years. He has five children and was deported to the Afghan border almost a week ago. He told The Associated Press he wasn’t allowed to take any household belongings with him. Everything he and his family own remains in Pakistan.
His seven-year-old daughter Hawa weeps because she is cold. She drinks tea for breakfast from a cut-up plastic bottle and sleeps without a blanket.
Her father urged the international community for help. “We cannot ask the Taliban government,” he said. “They have nothing because they are yet to be recognized as a government. There are families who have nothing here, no land, no home. They are just living under the open sky. No one is helping.”
Thamindri Da Silva, from the relief and development organization World Vision International, said most people are moved to a dry riverbed once they have gone through their initial registration and processing at a transit center.
People enter Afghanistan with just the clothes on their back because their watches, jewellery and cash were taken at the Pakistani border, she added.
Arshad Malik, country director for Save the Children, said many of those returning are coming back without education documents, making it difficult for them to continue their learning, as well as lacking the local Afghan languages of Dari and Pashto because they studied Urdu and English in Pakistan.
He warned that child labor in Afghanistan as well as their involvement in smuggling are likely to increase due to poverty as most returning families were among the poorest migrants in Pakistan.
“Smuggling at Torkham by children was one of the concerns from the past, so the involvement of children in smuggling and illegal goods’ transfer will increase,” Malik said.
The Taliban say they have committees working “around the clock” to help Afghans by distributing food, water and blankets.
Pope Francis in public remarks on Sunday at the Vatican decried the situation of “Afghan refugees who found refuge in Pakistan but now don’t know where to go anymore.”
Afghanistan is overwhelmed by challenges, compounded by the isolation of the Taliban-led government by the international community. Years of drought, a beleaguered economy and the aftermath of decades of war have led to the internal displacement of millions of Afghans.
Concerns have risen among the humanitarian community about the impoverished country being unable to support or integrate those currently forced to leave Pakistan.
veryGood! (4793)
Related
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Passengers lodge in military barracks after Amsterdam to Detroit flight is forced to land in Canada
- A $44 million lottery ticket, a Sunoco station, and the search for a winner
- Advice from a critic: Read 'Erasure' before seeing 'American Fiction'
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- What does 'sus' mean? Understanding the slang term's origins and usage.
- Music trends that took us by surprise in 2023
- CPR can be lifesaving for some, futile for others. Here's what makes the difference
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- FDNY reports no victims in Bronx partial building collapse
Ranking
- Trump's 'stop
- Singer Zahara, South Africa’s Afro-soul sensation and beloved ‘Country Girl,’ dies aged 36
- Katie Lee Biegel's Gift Guide Will Help You & Loved Ones Savor The Holiday Season
- Thousands gather to honor Mexico’s Virgin of Guadalupe on anniversary of 1531 apparition
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Can wasabi help your memory? A new study has linked the sushi condiment to a better brain
- Kentucky woman seeking court approval for abortion learned her embryo no longer has cardiac activity
- From ChatGPT to the Cricket World Cup, the top 25 most viewed Wikipedia articles of 2023
Recommendation
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Cheating, a history: 10 scandals that rocked the world of sports
UK leader Sunak is racing to persuade lawmakers to back his Rwanda migration bill in a key vote
Myanmar’s economy is deteriorating as its civil conflict intensifies, World Bank report says
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs are wildly off mark in blaming NFL refs for Kadarius Toney penalty
Why Anne Hathaway Says It’s “Lucky” Her Barbie Movie Didn’t Get Made
Investigators accessed Trump White House cellphone records and plan to use them at trial, special counsel says