‘Thirsty for our homeland’: Hope and worry mix for Afghan refugees as peace deal nears

In this picture taken on October 18, 2018, older Afghan refugees sit outside their mud house at a refugee camp on the outskirts of Islamabad, Pakistan. (AFP/File)
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Updated 15 September 2020
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‘Thirsty for our homeland’: Hope and worry mix for Afghan refugees as peace deal nears

  • For many Afghans, worries linger about returning to a country where the economic and social framework has been devastated by more than 40 years of war
  • Ongoing talks between the Taliban and Kabul government to reach a power-sharing deal could see the return home of millions of Afghan refugees who live in Pakistan

KARACHI: Residents at the New Saranan refugee camp in Pakistan’s Balochistan province gathered on Sunday to discuss the prospects of displaced Afghan families returning to their homeland as peace talks between Taliban insurgents and the Kabul government are ongoing to end decades of war in Afghanistan. 
About 2.5 million Afghans, many of whom fled their homeland after it was invaded by the Soviet Union in 1979, live in neighboring Pakistan, home to the world’s second-largest refugee population. 

Born in Pakistan to Afghan parents, many of the refugees have no Pakistani citizenship and dream of going “home” once a peace deal is signed between Taliban insurgents and the Kabul government who began key talks on Saturday. 
“If the talks are successful, we will not care if it’s day or night, we will just embark on our journey,” Muhammad Agha Ishaqzai, an Afghan elder who left his home in Sar Pul province in northern Afghanistan over three decades ago, told Arab News on Sunday. “We are thirsty for our homeland like a person who has fasted during hot summer days, and is waiting for a glass of water.”




Muhammad Agha Ishaqzai, right, and Afghan elders gather at the New Saranan refugee camp in Balochistan, 40 kilometers northwest of the provincial capital of Quetta, Pakistan, on September 13, 2020 (AN photo)

“We are watching the news and hope that Afghans will see peace after 40 years,” said Zahir Pashtun, a youth activist who attended the Sunday meeting. He said though the Afghans had seen various rounds of unsuccessful talks in the past, they were hopeful the latest dialogue would pave the way for them to restart their lives. 

An inclusive Afghan government with representation of all ethnicities and sects, and the return of lands and properties that refugees had left behind, were key to the successful repatriation of refugees, Pashtun said. 
The UN refugee agency UNHCR is alarmed that at a time of increasing fatigue among global donors, rising insular policies by governments and a possible formal end to war, millions of refugees risk falling through the cracks either in their host nations or in Afghanistan.
And indeed, for many Afghans, worries linger about the conditions in their home country, where the economic and social framework has been devastated by more than 40 years of war.
Some refugees say they worry about being forced to go to Afghanistan if a deal is struck with the Taliban, who still control large swathes of the country, without that translating to peace and respect for human rights.
“When I ask people if they will return, the majority say they have no reason to go back, even if the talks succeed,” said Syed Mustafa, a teacher and a community elder in the refugee-dominated Al-Asif area of Karachi in the southern Sindh province. 




An Afghan refugee girl carries her brother at a refugee camp on the outskirts of Islamabad, Pakistan on February 1, 2018. (AFP/File)

“A majority of over 60,000 refugees living in Sindh province were born and raised here,” Mustafa added. “When they go back to the land of their parents, they would feel like they are in a strangers’ land. Those who had gone there in the recent past, have come back.” 
Naemullah Rahimi, a shopkeeper in Al-Asif, said he was Afghan but his wife and children were born in Pakistan and considered it home. 
Muneeba Hayatullah, an Afghan widow living in Karachi’s Metroville area, said she wanted to see a peaceful Afghanistan: “But I don’t know if I will go back.”


Babar Azam dropped for scoring too slowly, says Pakistan coach Hesson

Updated 20 February 2026
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Babar Azam dropped for scoring too slowly, says Pakistan coach Hesson

  • Shaheen Shah Afridi was left out after conceding 101 runs in three matches
  • Pakistan will now face New Zealand in the opening match of the second phase

COLOMBO: Batting great Babar Azam was dropped for Pakistan’s final T20 World Cup group game against Namibia for scoring too slowly, said head coach Mike Hesson on Friday.

Azam, who is the highest run-scorer in T20 international history with 4,571 runs, was left out for the must-win game against Namibia as Pakistan racked up 199-3 and secured a place in the Super Eights by 102 runs.

The 2009 champions face New Zealand in Colombo on Saturday in the opening match of the second phase.

“I think Babar is well aware that his strike rate in the power play in the World Cup is less than 100 and that’s clearly not the role we think we need,” Hesson told reporters after Pakistan’s final practice session on Friday was washed out by rain.

Pakistan left out Azam for the same reason at last year’s Asia Cup and even after dismal showing in the Big Bash League, he was still selected for the T20 World Cup.

“We brought Babar back in for a specific role post the Asia Cup,” said Hesson.

“We’ve got plenty of other options who can come in and perform that role toward the end.

“Babar is actually the first to acknowledge that.

“He knows that he’s got a certain set of skills that the team requires and there are certain times where other players can perform that role more efficiently.”

Hesson also defended dropping pace spearhead Shaheen Shah Afridi after he conceded 101 runs in three matches, including 31 in two overs against India.

“We made a call that Salman Mirza was coming in for Shaheen, and he bowled incredibly well,” said Hesson.

“To be fair, he was probably really unlucky to not be playing the second and third games.”

Hesson was wary of Pakistan’s opponents on Saturday.

“New Zealand have played a huge amount in the subcontinent in recent times so we have to play at our best.”