ISLAMABAD: Speakers at the concluding day of the 10th Pak-Afghan Youth Dialogue on Wednesday urged the P
akistani authoriti
es to consider for citizen the cases of Afghans born in P
akistan or living in the country for over 20 years.
The participants also stressed the need for the P
akistani authoriti
es to extend timeframe for repatriation of refugees from two years to five years.
They said that any forced repatriation in a short duration of time could damage the goodwill P
akistan had earned among the Afghan people over the course of the last four decades.
CRSS project director Aized Ali stated that advocacy for naturalisation of Afghans who were born in P
akistan or had spent over two decades in the country was a core aspect of the P
akistan-Afghanistan Track 1.5/II Dialogue Beyond Boundaries.
Daily Times correspondent Tahir Khan, a speaker from P
akistani delegation, said, “It has never been a policy of P
akistan to expel Afghan refugees or to force them to return. P
akistan has hosted the Afghan refugees out of goodwill and a sense of brotherhood for 40 years.”
He said the recent concerted efforts to repatriate refugees were taken in view of the threat posed by militants and the burden on P
akistani economy because of the counter
terrorism efforts.
Khan mentioned that in an unofficial meeting with a visiting Afghan delegation last month, P
akistan’s SAFRON Minister had explicitly stated that Afghan refugees were never been involved in any
terrorist attacks or organised crime in P
akistan.
He added that due to the urgency of the issue, Afghan CEO Dr. Abdullah Abdullah and President Ashraf Ghani had also recently made pledg
es to bring back Afghan refugees from both P
akistan and Iran in the next two years. At the moment, he said, P
akistan was hosting 1.4 million Afghan refugees, according to UNHCR statistics.
The discussion focused on achieving peace in the region and the role of the youth in this r
egard, ending with a recognition that P
akistan considered the Afghan refugee crisis as a humanitarian issue, and not a political one. The dialogue concluded with the hope that P
akistani PM Shahid Khaqan Abbasi’s expected visit to Kabul next month, in response to President Ghani’s invitation, could lead to a headway in resolution of longstanding issues including naturalisation of Afghan refugees living in P
akistan for over two decades.
The young Afghans present on the occasion thanked the P
akistani people for offering their hom
es to the refugees and allowing them freedom of movement. They also thanked the federal government for allowing the refugees educational and economic opportunities, stating that this was unlike Iran where Afghan refugees were restricted to their camps. Participants, most of whom were enrolled in universities in P
akistan, paid their gratitude to the people of P
akistan for extending hospitality and feelings of brotherhood towards their Afghan compatriots.
The 10thPak-Afghan youth dialogue held under CRSS’s Afghan Studies Centre Initiative was focused on bringing together the youth of two neighbouring countries on one platform and creating a better understanding between the two neighbors.
The dialogue featured youth from Afghan cities of Mazar-i-Sharif, Baghlan, Nangarhar, and Kabul, and P
akistani cities of Lahore, Quetta, Rawalpindi, Swat, and Bannu.
Published in Daily Times, March 29th 2018.