Pakistan guards use tear gas to disperse protesters at Chaman border with Afghanistan

Pakistan border guards use tear gas to disperse people protesting against the implementation of a visa and passport regime for travel through a main border crossing with Afghanistan at Chaman border, Pakistan, on February 20, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 21 February 2024
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Pakistan guards use tear gas to disperse protesters at Chaman border with Afghanistan

  • Laborers are protesting government’s implementation of strict visa, passport requirements for cross-border travel
  • Before Nov. 2023 expulsion drive against illegal foreigners, people could travel across porous border without these documents 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan border guards used tear gas Tuesday to disperse hundreds of people protesting against the implementation of a visa and passport regime for travel through a main border crossing with Afghanistan.

Protesters have been camped near the Chaman border crossing in the southwestern Balochistan province since October last year when Pakistan announced it would expel all illegal foreigners, mostly Afghans, from Nov. 1, and enforce strict immigration-related restrictions on border crossings, making the possession of valid passports and visas a requirement for travel. The “one document regime” replaced the decades-old practice of granting special travel permits to individuals from divided tribes straddling the nearly 2,600-kilometer border between the two countries.

“There was an operation against the protesters in the afternoon [Tuesday],” a Pakistani laborer, Grann, said in Pashto. “So, we have all gathered here and are throwing stones at the fortress [check post].”

Video footage widely shared on mainstream and social media showed tear gas in the air and hundreds of protesters near the border. 

Graan said the protests were being held against the requirement for passports at Chaman, a main crossing for travelers and goods between Pakistan and landlocked Afghanistan. The other major crossing is at Torkham in the northwest.

“We want to be allowed to come and go freely,” Graan said. “The border has been sealed for 4 months and 10 days. We have nothing left to eat. There is no oil or flour in our homes, and they [Pakistan government] are saying they will only accept passports. We are helpless.”

The expulsion drive was launched amid a row with Kabul over charges that it harbors anti-Pakistan militants, which the Taliban government denies. 

Until November last year, Pakistan was home to over 4 million Afghan migrants and refugees, about 1.7 million of them undocumented. Many came after the Taliban retook Afghanistan in 2021, and a large number have been present since the 1979 Soviet invasion. Islamabad says it is battling economic and security crises and can no longer host thousands of Afghans. 

Thousands of tribespeople used to travel through the Chaman border crossing daily for work or to meet family members on the other side. They would use a slip of paper, locally called tazkira, granted to them under easement rights that guaranteed free travel.

Since the expulsion drive began, local tribesmen, laborers and traders have been protesting daily at the Chaman border, saying the new policy has disrupted cross-border economic activity and led to unemployment. 

“We have nothing to eat, we are surviving on loans,” another protester, Abdul Rasheed, said. “Now we have reached a stage where we are giving water to our infants instead of milk … The Friendship Gate [between Pakistan and Afghanistan] should kindly be opened.”

According to government data, 493,648 Afghans have been repatriated since the expulsion policy began in Nov. 1 last year. 

With input from Reuters


Pakistan joins regional talks on Afghanistan in Iran as Kabul stays away

Updated 15 December 2025
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Pakistan joins regional talks on Afghanistan in Iran as Kabul stays away

  • China, Pakistan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan all joined talks organized by Iran, as did Russia
  • Afghanistan was invited but decided not to attend, Taliban-led government was tight-lipped on the reasons

TEHRAN, Iran: Afghanistan’s neighbors met in Iran and agreed to deepen regional coordination to address political, economic and security challenges, as well as calling for sanctions on Afghanistan to be lifted. 

The only absent party? Afghanistan itself.

China, Pakistan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan all joined the talks organized by Iran, as did Russia, according to a statement released after the meeting on Sunday.

Afghanistan was invited but decided not to attend. Its Taliban-led government was tight-lipped on the reasons, with the foreign ministry saying only that it would not participate because Afghanistan “currently maintains active engagement with regional countries through existing regional organizations and formats, and has made good progress in this regard.”

The statement from the talks in Iran stressed the importance of maintaining economic and trade ties with Afghanistan to improve living conditions and called for the country’s integration into regional political and economic processes.

The Taliban were isolated after they retook power in Afghanistan in August 2021, but in the past year, they have developed diplomatic ties. They now raise several billion dollars every year in tax revenues to keep the lights on.

However, Afghanistan is still struggling economically. Millions rely on aid for survival, and the struggling economy has been further impacted by the international community not recognizing the Taliban government’s seizure of power in the wake of the chaotic withdrawal of US-led troops in 2021. Natural disasters and the flow of Afghans fleeing Pakistan under pressure to return home have underlined Afghanistan’s reliance on foreign aid to meet essential needs.

The countries at the talks also voiced security concerns and pledged cooperation in combating terrorism, drug trafficking and human smuggling, while opposing any foreign military presence in Afghanistan. They underscored the responsibility of the international community to lift sanctions and release Afghanistan’s frozen assets, and urged international organizations to support the dignified return of Afghan refugees from neighboring countries.

The participants backed efforts to reduce tensions between Afghanistan and Pakistan, which have been particularly strained, with border clashes between the two sides killing dozens of civilians, soldiers and suspected militants and wounding hundreds more.

The violence followed explosions in Kabul on Oct. 9 that Afghan authorities blamed on Pakistan. A Qatar-mediated ceasefire has largely held since October, although there have been limited border clashes. The two sides failed to reach an overall agreement in November despite three rounds of peace talks.

Asif Durrani, Pakistan’s former special representative for Afghanistan, said the Taliban government’s decision to skip the meeting reflected a “lack of political maturity.” 

Writing on X, Durrani said the move reinforced concerns that the Taliban were unwilling to negotiate, instead adopting an “I don’t accept” stance that he said would do little to resolve serious regional problems.

Mohammad Sadiq, the current Pakistani special representative for Afghanistan who attended the talks, wrote on X that the Afghan people had already suffered enough and deserved better.

Only an Afghanistan that does not harbor militants would inspire confidence among neighboring and regional countries to engage meaningfully with Kabul and help unlock the country’s economic and connectivity potential, he wrote.

Participants agreed to hold the next meeting of foreign ministers of Afghanistan’s neighboring countries as soon as possible in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, and welcomed Pakistan’s offer to host the next round of special envoys’ talks in Islamabad in March.

Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman, Esmail Baghaei, on Sunday said that the meeting had not been held for about two years and marked the first such gathering attended by special envoys on Afghanistan from neighboring countries as well as Russia. Russia and Uzbekistan sent the special envoys of their presidents, while Pakistan was represented by a delegate from the prime minister’s office.

Landlocked Afghanistan is sandwiched between the Middle East, Central Asia, and South Asia, making it strategically located for energy-rich and energy-hungry nations.