Anwaarul Haq Kakar, the prime minister, has once again justified the government’s decision to send illegal people back home, arguing that Pakistan cannot continue to jeopardise its security by hosting such individuals. The guardians had started a national effort in November to expel undocumented foreign nationals, most of whom were Afghans. Afghanistan and a number of other places have criticised the decision, but the government stood its own and insisted that it was not directed towards any specific ethnic group. The government calculates that 1.7 million of the more than four million Afghans residing in Pakistan are undocumented. Thousands of Afghans have crossed the border at Torkham and Chaman and are back home.
According to Kakar’s op-ed in The Guardian, “between four and five million migrants (roughly the population of Ireland)” have come in Pakistan over the last three to four decades. Many don’t deserve to stay. Even though we did not ratify the 1951 Convention on Refugees or its 1967 Protocol, we have graciously taken in the greatest number of cases of refugees. He declared, “We have fulfilled our legal, moral, and humanitarian obligations because hospitality is in our DNA.” Assuring “as many as we can while giving those with no right to remain ample opportunity to leave voluntarily,” the prime minister said that Pakistan had worked extremely hard over a long period of time to accommodate.