Trump’s plans for travel ban ‘unfortunate, big setback,’ Pakistanis say

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks after signing executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House on March 06, 2025 in Washington, DC. (AFP/File)
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Updated 07 March 2025
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Trump’s plans for travel ban ‘unfortunate, big setback,’ Pakistanis say

  • New travel ban by Trump could bar people from Afghanistan, Pakistan from entering US as soon as next week 
  • New ban could affect tens of thousands of Afghans who have been cleared for resettlement in the US as refugees

ISLAMABAD: Pakistanis and an Afghan national living in Islamabad this week called a new potential US travel ban ‘unfortunate,’ saying it could affect young Pakistanis who invested money to study in US universities.
A new travel ban by President Donald Trump could bar people from Afghanistan and Pakistan from entering the US as soon as next week based on a government review of countries’ security and vetting risks, three sources familiar with the matter said.
Speaking to Reuters, Syed Abbas Haider, a 29-year-old Islamabad resident, said a potential ban would be “unfortunate and strange,” considering that the people and government of Pakistan consider the US “an ally and supporter.”
The new ban could affect tens of thousands of Afghans who have been cleared for resettlement in the US as refugees or on Special Immigrant Visas because they are at risk of Taliban retribution for working for the US during a 20-year war in their home country.
Ehsanullah Ahmadzai, a 31-year-old Afghani who has been living in Islamabad for three years, said restrictions should not be placed on vulnerable people who need US assistance.
Trump issued an executive order on January 20 requiring intensified security vetting of any foreigners seeking admission to the US to detect national security threats.
That order directed several cabinet members to submit by March 12 a list of countries from which travel should be partly or fully suspended because their “vetting and screening information is so deficient.”
Afghanistan will be included in the recommended list of countries for a complete travel ban, said the three sources and one other who also asked not to be identified.
The three sources said Pakistan also would be recommended for inclusion.
The departments of State, Justice and Homeland Security and the Office of the Director for National Intelligence, whose leaders are overseeing the initiative, did not respond immediately to requests for comment.


In Peshawar, 76-year-old artist struggles to keep near-extinct Mughal wax art alive

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In Peshawar, 76-year-old artist struggles to keep near-extinct Mughal wax art alive

  • Craft involves intricate process using heated wax, oil, pigments, limestone to create textured, miniature artworks
  • Riaz Ahmad, who has trained his son in wax art, says he hopes to train more people to preserve traditional craft 

PESHAWAR: Riaz Ahmad, 76, stirs wax in a small plastic can with a long chopstick, takes it out on the palm of his left hand and adds natural color before drawing designs on a piece of cloth.

Surrounded by several such pieces of black cloth with unique art, Ahmad strives every passing day to keep the 500-year-old, Mughal-era wax art alive at his home near the Lahori Gate in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar.

Ahmad comes from a well-known family of wax artists who were based in Shillong and Darjeeling in present-day India and had migrated to Peshawar during the 1947 partition of the sub-continent.

His work remains rooted in tradition, faithfully repeating patterns passed down through generations and winning Ahmad several awards both at home and abroad in recognition of his dedication.

“I have been making the same Mughal era designs that my forefathers used to make,” he told Arab News last week.

 

“I went to India in 2004, where I received the UNESCO Seal of Excellence [for Handicrafts] award... On 23 March, 2012, the Government of Pakistan awarded me the Tamgha-i-Imtiaz.”

The near-extinct traditional craft, which is believed to have originated in Central Asia and refined under the Mughal patronage, particularly in Peshawar, involves an intricate process using heated wax, linseed oil, powdered pigments, and limestone to create detailed, textured and often colorful miniature artworks by hand.

Ahmad learnt wax art from his father, Miran Bakhsh, nearly six decades ago.

“My parents used to do this work in Shillong and Darjeeling [in present-day India]. They had a shop there, and after the Partition, they migrated to Peshawar, Pakistan,” he said. “When they came here, they started doing the same work.”

A basic piece of his work costs around Rs3,000 ($10.7). A larger piece made on order can fetch between Rs5,000 and Rs15,000 ($17-$53), but such orders are rare.

“Wax and colors have become expensive. When I sell a piece for Rs3,000, around Rs1,000 goes into expenses, and Rs2,000 is my daily wage,” Ahmad said.

But the 76-year-old worries more about the future of the art form, which he insists cannot be learned quickly and requires “love and dedication.”

“Some people say they want to come, some from Karachi and some from Lahore, but it becomes difficult for me to go there or for them to come here,” he said.

Most wax artists in Peshawar have abandoned the art due to a lack of institutional support, according to Ahmad, who relies primarily on exhibitions to earn a living.

“The reason [for the decline of this art form] is that the government does not pay attention. They are caught in their own conflicts, and the culture is suffering,” Ahmad said.

“Other artists have left this art. Some are selling rice and some are driving rickshaws,” he added. “I have been doing this work inside my house. If there is any event, we go there and sell our art.”

Saad Bin Awais, a spokesperson for the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Culture and Tourism Authority (KPCTA), said the government has engaged artisans in several projects. He said some of these projects have come to an end while others are ongoing.

“Riaz Ahmad is the only wax artist in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the authority is serious about facilitating him,” he said, adding that the KPCTA facilitates Ahmad’s participation in exhibitions across the country to showcase his art.

“We have also been collecting data of artists in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa for an upcoming project to facilitate them in any way possible.”

Ahmad has trained his son, Fayyaz, in wax art who now practices it in Islamabad. The septuagenarian says he wishes to train more people to preserve the dying art form.

“I cannot leave this work,” he said. “I will continue this art even though my hands shake.”