Pakistan’s Punjab to send home more Afghans in repatriation drive

Afghan refugees with their belongings wait for deportation as they arrive in their trucks at the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in Torkham on September 16, 2025. (AFP/ file)
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Updated 19 February 2026
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Pakistan’s Punjab to send home more Afghans in repatriation drive

  • Nationwide repatriation campaign, launched in late 2023, has strained relations between neighbors Pakistan and Afghanistan
  • According to ⁠a Punjab Home Department statement, more than 2 million Afghan citizens have been sent back from across Pakistan

LAHORE: Pakistan’s Punjab ‌province was set to repatriate 20 Afghan citizens to their homeland on Thursday as it continued its drive against undocumented ​Afghan nationals, a Punjab Home Department spokesperson said.

The nationwide repatriation campaign, launched in late 2023, has strained relations between neighbors Pakistan and Afghanistan. The policy has drawn criticism from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, which has said it has received reports of arrests and expulsions of legally registered Afghans and ‌warned that ‌sending them back in this ​way ‌breaches Pakistan’s ⁠international ​obligations.

According to ⁠a Punjab Home Department statement, official statistics show that more than 2 million Afghan citizens have been sent back from across Pakistan.

“In Punjab alone, over 150,000 undocumented Afghans have been repatriated,” the statement said. It added that all Afghan citizens without a valid visa are required ⁠to leave, while those with valid ‌visas may continue to work ‌or run businesses.

Punjab is currently ​operating 37 holding centers ‌accommodating 69 Afghan nationals, 20 of whom were scheduled ‌for repatriation on Thursday, the spokesperson said.

Tensions between the two countries remain high. Pakistan accuses Afghanistan of failing to act against what it says are terror networks operating from ‌Afghan soil. Afghanistan denies the allegations.

On Wednesday, Pakistan summoned the Afghan deputy head of mission ⁠to ⁠raise concerns about a February 16 attack on security forces in Bajaur in northwest Pakistan that killed 11 Pakistani soldiers and a child.

The Afghan embassy in Islamabad did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Last year, the two sides were engaged in their heaviest cross-border clashes since the Taliban returned to power in 2021, though a fragile ceasefire has held since the deadly October fighting.

Afghanistan last week ​freed three Pakistani ​soldiers, detained in the October 12 clashes, handing them over to a Saudi delegation in Kabul. 


Pakistan bank enables Shariah-compliant digital payment facility for passengers at Islamabad airport

Updated 23 February 2026
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Pakistan bank enables Shariah-compliant digital payment facility for passengers at Islamabad airport

  • Pakistan is a cash-dominated market where a significant portion of transactions in the informal sector are made without any taxes, officials say
  • The move comes amid Pakistan’s efforts to introduce a cashless model at airports under which only digital service providers can provide services

KARACHI: Aik, Pakistan’s first Islamic digital bank, has enabled fully digital payments at Islamabad International Airport to offer travelers and passengers secure, Shariah compliant digital transaction facility.

The development comes amid Pakistan’s efforts to introduce a cashless model at airports across the country, under which only digital service providers can provide services to customers.

Aik, a subsidiary of Bank Islami, said it has onboarded merchants across the Islamabad airport and integrated QR code deployments at key touchpoints to allow passengers and visitors to make secure, seamless, and Shariah-compliant digital transactions at all counters, retail outlets, and service points.

It said the implementation complies with the regulations and framework set by the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) and is a working model for a large-scale adoption of cashless systems in public infrastructure.

“This deployment reflects our commitment to building practical digital infrastructure that improves everyday transactions,” Aik Chief Officer Ashfaque Ahmed said in a statement.

“By enabling a fully cashless environment at a major national gateway, we are supporting efficiency, transparency, and financial inclusion at scale. This is not only a project; it is a foundation for Pakistan’s cashless future.”

Pakistan is a cash-dominated market where a significant portion of transactions, particularly in the informal sector, are conducted in cash. Officials say many of these transactions are aimed at avoiding taxes.

In recent years, the SBP has taken steps to ensure a transition toward a more cashless economy so that transactions are more traceable, reducing chances of tax evasion and corruption.

By digitizing Islamabad airport, aik said it continues to invest in secure and accessible financial solutions that “expand digital participation and support national economic modernization.”