International media watchdog urges Pakistan not to deport 200 afghan journalists

International media watchdog urges Pakistan not to deport 200 afghan journalists

Nov 7, 2023 - 18:30
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International media watchdog urges Pakistan not to deport 200 afghan journalists

An international media watchdog has urged Pakistan not to deport more than 200 Afghan journalists who fled their homeland after the Taliban retook control in August 2021, after more than two decades of conflict.

Reporters Without Borders has made this appeal one week after Pakistan began cracking down on foreign nationals without proper documentation, primarily an estimated 1.7 million Afghans.

After a grace period of one month for unregistered foreigners to leave voluntarily, the crackdown started on November 1. To avoid being detained and forcibly removed, almost 270,000 Afghans have fled to their homeland. Among them were some who had spent as much as forty years living in Pakistan.

Some said they never registered with the U.N. refugee agency because Pakistani authorities were hospitable, and they didn’t imagine that they would be told to leave at short notice.

The Afghans who are still in Pakistan include about 200 journalists as well as about 25,000 Afghans waiting for relocation to the United States under a special refugee programme. Under U.S. rules, applicants must first relocate to a third country in this case Pakistan for their cases to be processed.

The U.S. Embassy in Islamabad has issued letters to such applicants to protect them from deportation, but Pakistani authorities say they have no legal value.

Reporters Without Borders said in a statement Monday that some Afghan journalists in Pakistan have been subjected to harassment and extortion by Pakistani police officers, arbitrary arrest, pressure on landlords to expel Afghan tenants, and never-ending visa application procedures.

It said some had published sensitive information in Afghanistan and sought refuge in Pakistan for safety.

Deporting them back to Afghanistan would clearly expose them to great danger. We call on the Pakistani government to refrain from arresting any of them and to guarantee their protection and security in Pakistan, Reporters Without Borders said.

Pakistani authorities said they would not expel any Afghan journalists facing threats at home, but that they would only consider the cases of genuine working journalists.

Many Afghan journalists lost their jobs after the Taliban takeover. Female journalists face additional hardships at home because of work prohibitions and travel restrictions imposed by the Taliban.

Curbs on journalists in Afghanistan have drawn criticism from international rights groups.

In May. the United Nations said intimidation, threats and attacks on Afghan journalists by the Taliban were unacceptable. During the Taliban’s previous rule in the late 1990s, they barred most television, radio and newspapers in the country.

Reporters without Borders ranks Afghanistan 152 out of 180 countries in its latest World Press Freedom Index.

(with inputs from agencies)

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