Pakistan demands Afghan asylum seekers out of the country by November
A spike in attacks along the two countries' border, which Islamabad blames on Afghanistan-based operatives, has escalated tensions this year.
It has also fuelled resentment in Islamabad, which on Tuesday announced a crackdown on "illegal" migrants.
The Taliban government urged Pakistan to rethink its "unacceptable" move.
Afghanistan's rulers have repeatedly denied providing refuge for militants who target Pakistan.
Last week, a blast at a mosque in Mastung city, near the border with Afghanistan, killed at least 50 people during a religious celebration.
Pakistan's Interior Minister Sarfraz Bugti did not appear to directly reference that and another attack in Balochistan province when he announced the crackdown order on "illegal" Afghans on Tuesday.
The right to seek refuge in a foreign country is enshrined in international law. Pakistan has taken in hundreds of thousands of Afghan refugees during decades of war - particularly since the Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan in 2021.
About 1.3 million Afghans are registered as refugees while another 880,000 have received the legal status to remain, according to the UN.
But another 1.7 million people are in the country "illegally", claimed Mr Bugti on Tuesday - an apparent reference to those who have not yet gained refugee status.
He said those people would have to leave the country by the end of the month - whether voluntarily or through a forced deportation.
"If they do not go... then all the law enforcement agencies in the provinces or federal government will be utilised to deport them," he said according to state media reports. He did not provide further details on how such an operation would take place.
He also announced a taskforce aimed at identifying and confiscating private businesses and assets of "illegal" Afghans in the country.
0 Comment