Afghan refugee housed by UK ‘in error’ faces deportation from Pakistan

Above, Afghan men stand in queue inside a fenced corridor as they wait to cross into Pakistan at the zero-point Torkham border crossing between Afghanistan and Pakistan in Nangarhar. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 25 October 2023
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Afghan refugee housed by UK ‘in error’ faces deportation from Pakistan

  • Father of 4 Mohammad Zaker Nasery spent almost 2 years living in hotel before eviction notice
  • Dad now faces homelessness after what MP described as ‘shameful saga of government failures’

LONDON: An Afghan refugee who was housed by the UK in Pakistan for 18 months “in error” is facing deportation back to Afghanistan, The Independent reported on Wednesday.

After fleeing Taliban-ruled Kabul based on a promise of being resettled in Britain, Mohammad Zaker Nasery spent more than a year living in a hotel in Pakistan funded by the British government.

But despite having a UK visa approved, Nasery, a father of four, was deemed ineligible for Britain’s resettlement scheme for Afghans, and was given two weeks’ notice to leave his accommodation.

He now faces homelessness in Pakistan or deportation back to Afghanistan after being informed that his accommodation support was given “in error.”

Nasery said: “I have been given 14 days to leave the hotel, find my own funds and accommodation, and update my visa. Currently I don’t have money to rent a house or feed my family. I am in a stressed and frustrated situation.”

He lived in the hotel for almost two years, along with his wife and four children, who had later joined him.

Nasery had crossed into Pakistan with the help of a British High Commission official after working as a contractor between 2019 and 2021 on a British Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office scheme for women and girls in Afghanistan.

More than 30 Afghan families also living in the hotel sent a letter of support for Nasery to the British High Commission, demanding that his eviction be canceled.

Nasery’s UK visa was approved by the Home Office in May 2022, but was subsequently canceled on the basis that Afghan families can only receive approval after being deemed eligible for resettlement schemes.

His application for the UK’s Afghan relocations and assistance policy was turned down at the beginning of 2023, and despite a review of the decision, UK authorities claimed he had not worked alongside a British government department or contributed to UK military objectives.

An eviction letter by the British High Commission said: “While in third countries, the UK government may provide discretional support including accommodation to applicants who have been assessed as eligible for relocation to the UK under Arap. In error, this support was provided for you.”

Labour Party MP Mary Foy, who had supported Nasery’s case, described the eviction as part of a “shameful saga of government failures.”

She said: “Since Mr. Nasery’s case was brought to my attention by a constituent over a year ago, the government’s responses to his case have been slow, uncoordinated, and contradictory. All the while, he and his family have been abandoned to an uncertain future.”

A British government spokesperson said: “The UK has made an ambitious and generous commitment to help at-risk people in Afghanistan and, so far, we have brought around 24,600 people to safety, including thousands of people eligible for our Afghan schemes.”


EU proposes suspending a duty-free sugar import scheme

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EU proposes suspending a duty-free sugar import scheme

  • The IPR scheme allows companies to import sugar at zero duty and ⁠without limits
  • White sugar imports under the IPR totalled 155,000 tons in 2024/25, up 5 percent year-on-year

PARIS: The European Commission proposed suspending a scheme allowing some duty-free sugar imports into the bloc, aiming to ease pressure on European producers facing falling prices and increased competition.
“I will propose a temporary suspension of the sugar inward processing regime to ease pressures on sugar producers,” European Commissioner for Agriculture and Food Christophe Hansen said on X late on Monday.
The IPR scheme allows companies to import sugar at zero duty and ⁠without limits, provided the sugar is refined or processed into food products and then re-exported outside the European Union.
Raw sugar imported into the EU under the IPR in the 2024/25 marketing year totalled 587,000 metric tons, up 19 percent on the previous ⁠year, of which 95 percent came from Brazil, European Commission data showed.
White sugar imports under the IPR totalled 155,000 tons in 2024/25, up 5 percent year-on-year, of which 43 percent came from Brazil, followed by Morocco, Egypt and Ukraine, the data showed.
European sugar beet producers have raised concerns about unfair competition and the potential impact of a trade deal with the Mercosur bloc of South ⁠American countries which includes a larger sugar quota.
Producers say imports have contributed to a supply glut that led EU sugar prices to slump to their lowest in at least three years.
The European sugar beet growers lobby CIBE expressed strong support for the decision, calling it timely and necessary.
“It will provide the right signal and some relief on a very depressed EU sugar market,” the group said on X.