ISLAMABAD: As Pakistan intensifies its campaign to expel thousands of Afghan migrants, opinions in Islamabad remain divided, according to interviews with residents.
Earlier this year, Pakistan’s interior ministry asked all “illegal foreigners” and holders of Afghan Citizen Cards — a document launched in 2017 to grant temporary legal status to Afghan refugees — to leave the country before Mar. 31, warning that they would otherwise be deported from April 1. The move is part of a larger repatriation drive of foreign citizens that began in November 2023, with over 900,000 Afghans expelled from Pakistan since.
While 19-year-old student Rubab Iffat called the deportations “not right,” others like teacher Pervaiz Akhtar supported the government’s decision, saying Afghans were against Pakistan and were behind terror attacks in the country. The government in Kabul denies Afghanistan is to blame for Pakistan’s security problems.
“Even on social media, they [Afghans] are against Pakistan ... They make their living here, but they are against us,” Akhtar said.
“If you look overall, even locally, if you ask someone what Afghans say about us, they are against our country. Terrorism is also being carried out from there [Afghanistan] so it is justified that they leave. And they should go by all means, their country is Afghanistan.”
But Iffat said the government was not “doing the right thing” by expelling Afghans:
“Because they have been living here [Pakistan] for a long time and their home is here now, their children are studying here, so this is their country too. They should be given the same rights as us.”
Meanwhile, Afghanistan-bound trucks have been piling up outside Pakistan migrant camps as pressure to leave mounts.
In a migrant camp in the southwestern border town of Chaman, Afghan migrant Ismail prepared to return to his home country, leaving behind an “unfinished” life after a decade in Pakistan.
“I had a stable job, I had found stability,” he said, standing in front of rows of loaded trucks bound for Afghanistan. “Then the government told us we had to leave.”
Ghulam Hazrat said he had to leave behind his house and business and in the days leading up to leaving Karachi where he has lived for years, he had faced harassment from police.
“We were harassed every day. They didn’t even spare us on the streets and threw us straight into jail,” Hazrat added.
“Because of all this, we became very desperate and decided to leave Karachi [for Afghanistan].”
Pakistanis divided as Afghan migrants face expulsion under new policy
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Pakistanis divided as Afghan migrants face expulsion under new policy
- Pakistan has asked all “illegal foreigners” and Afghan Citizen Card holders to leave or face deportation from April 1
- Move is part of larger deportation drive that began in November 2023 and has seen over 900,000 Afghans expelled
Pakistan likely to import around 7 million cotton bales this year as local production nearly halves
- Pakistan produced 5.3 million cotton bales by mid-December against 10 million targeted, government data shows
- While the imports may ensure smooth supply of raw material, they may put pressure on foreign exchange reserves
KARACHI: Pakistan is likely to import around 7 million cotton bales this year owing to a decline of nearly half the annual target set by the Federal Committee on Agriculture (FCA), industry stakeholders said on Tuesday.
Pakistan’s cotton production stood at 5.3 million bales each weighing 170 kilograms as of Dec. 15, according to state-run Pakistan Central Cotton Committee (PCCC) data. The FCA had set a target of 10.2 million bales in April.
Karachi Cotton Brokers Forum (KCBF) Chairman Naseem Usman Osawala sees the country’s cotton production declining by 46 percent this season, compared to the FCA target.
“The country is expected to produce about 5.5 million bales this year,” he told Arab News, adding Pakistan would have to import around 7 million bales to meet requirement of its textile industry which consumes about 12 million bales a year.
The country had sown cotton over 2.002 million hectares, which was down by 11 percent from the targeted 2.26 million hectares.
Muhammad Waqas Ghani, head of research at Karachi-based JS Global Capital brokerage firm, said the South Asian country is likely to miss its cotton output target of 10 million bales.
“At the current rate of arrival, the output can reach 7 million bales at its best,” he added.
Cotton is a raw material for Pakistan’s largest textile industry and was the worst hit crop by climate-induced floods earlier this year.
Osawala said Pakistan’s cotton production has been falling because of an increasing number of sugar mills being established in the country’s cotton-producing regions.
Courts in Pakistan have been issuing significant rulings to bar the establishment of sugar mills in the designated cotton belt areas of the Punjab province. In 2018, the Supreme Court ordered relocation of three sugar mills from cotton-producing districts in southern Punjab to protect the crop.
Since cotton prices are low in the international market, textile millers would go for more imports, according to the KCBF chairman.
On Dec. 22, the price of cotton in the New York market stood at as much as 65.85 cents per pound, 1.64 cents lower than last year, according to the PCCC data.
Osawala said Pakistan’s increasing textile imports are also “hurting local cotton production.”
According to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics’ (PBS) July-November data, the country had imported raw cotton, synthetic fiber, synthetic and artificial silk yarn and worn clothing worth $2.82 billion, 5 percent more than the imports during the same period last year.
Speaking of the impact of Pakistan’s falling cotton production, Kamran Arshad, chairman of All Pakistan Textile Mills Association (APTMA), said the millers would have to import “a lot of cotton” this year.
“I think approximately 7-7.5 million bales will have to be imported this year,” he said.
The textile and apparel sector is Pakistan’s largest exporter, accounting for more than half of the country’s overall exports and contributing around 8.5 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP) by employing nearly 40 percent of the industrial labor force. But high energy costs and outdated infrastructure among other factors continue to slow growth and leave the country trailing regional peers.
In the last fiscal year, Pakistan imported as much as 6.2 million cotton bales each weighing 220 kilograms, mostly from Brazil and the United States, according to KCBF Chairman Arshad.
Shankar Talreja, head of research at Karachi-based Topline Securities, said Pakistan is likely to import cotton worth $1.2 billion this year “considering the requirement.”
“The full-year import of cotton is likely to remain over $1 billion,” Talreja said.
Economic experts say while importing more cotton would ensure smooth supply of raw material to Pakistan’s textile sector, it may put pressure on the country’s foreign exchange reserves that rose to $15.9 billion last week after the International Monetary Fund (IMF) released a $1.2 billion tranche under Pakistan’s $7 billion loan program.










