UN says Afghan arrests in Pakistan spike by 146pc in one week

Published November 8, 2025
An Afghan refugee family, along with their belongings, sits on a truck as they await deportation to Afghanistan near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in Chaman on November 7, 2025. — AFP
An Afghan refugee family, along with their belongings, sits on a truck as they await deportation to Afghanistan near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in Chaman on November 7, 2025. — AFP

ISLAMABAD: The number of Afghan nationals arrested and detained in Pakistan surged by 146 per cent in a single week, a spike linked to the reopening of border crossings, according to a joint report by the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).

A total of 7,764 Afghan nationals were arrested and detained in the week ending Nov 1, a significant increase from the previous week, the report said.

Of those arrested between Oct 26 and Nov 1, Afghan Citizen Card (ACC) holders and undocumented Afghans accounted for 77pc, while Proof of Registration (PoR) card holders represented the remaining 23 pc, it added.

The report noted that 86pc of the arrests and detentions occurred in Balochistan. Across the country, the top three districts for arrests and detentions between Jan 1 and Nov 1, 2025, were Chagi, Attock and Quetta.

Links the surge to reopening of border crossings; reveals Balochistan is epicentre of the crackdown

The rate of returns and deportations also rose sharply in the last week of October. According to the UN data, the number of returns increased by 101pc and deportations by 131pc compared to the week of Oct 19-25.

The figures climbed from 18,630 returns, including 3,341 deportations, in the previous week to 37,448 returns, including 7,733 deportations, in the week ending Nov 1.

“This notable increase is primarily attributed to the reopening of the Chaman border, with Torkham also reopening on Nov 1,” the report stated.

From Sept 15, 2023, to Nov 1, 2025, a cumulative total of 1,667,713 individuals have returned to Afghanistan.

For the returns from Oct 26 to Nov 1, the largest group was PoR holders at 47pc, followed by undocumented individuals at 44pc and ACC holders at 8pc. In contrast, deportees during the same period were overwhelmingly undocumented at 93pc.

The report found that fear of arrest was the primary reason for return among 93pc of undocumented individuals and ACC holders, and for 39pc of PoR holders, since April 1, 2023.

The recent activity follows several government directives issued this year impacting Afghan nationals.

In July, the government ordered the repatriation of PoR card holders following the expiration of their card validity on June 30, later setting a Sept 1 deadline for them to leave Pakistan.

Published in Dawn, November 8th, 2025

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