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Afghan man whose details had accidentally leaked from the United Kingdom in Violation of datahas been detained in Pakistan for immediate deportation with several family members, his son told the BBC.
The BBC see documents that seem to confirm that the man is part of the Afghan special forces units who have worked with the British forces in Afghanistan, known as the Troiki.
The threat of deportation comes as Pakistan continues his desire to eliminate what they say are “illegal foreign citizens” in their countries.
But the Afghan man’s son said their case was especially urgent, as if they were deported to Afghanistan, he fears that they would be killed for the association of his father’s troes.
The Taliban government claims that all Afghans can “live in the country without fear.” But a UN report entitled “No Safe Haven”, which was published last month, questioned their assurances of a common amnesty.
The man and his family originally applied to the Afghan policy to move and assist the United Kingdom (ARAP) – which was created to move and protect Afghans who worked with British forces or by the UK government in Afghanistan shortly after the Taliban returned to August in August
The family was in Pakistan in anticipation of a final decision on the application – which was approved by the Ministry of Defense last year – when the Pakistani authorities came to take them away.
The son of the man, Ryan, whose name is changing for his safety, told the BBC that he was avoiding being rounded after hiding in a hotel bath in the capital Islamabad with his wife and baby, as several of his family members were taken to a holding camp.
“Some of my family are only children, the youngest are only eight months old, we continued to ask the police to leave them.”
Later, his brother called him from the camp to say that the employees informed them that they would be deported, Ryan added.
“My brother told me that they were held in a room with about 90 other people and were then separated by name and separated,” Ryan said. “I am so afraid that they will suddenly be deported.”
Ryan explained that the family had been in Limbo in Pakistan since October 2024, when the family registered their biometry.
But they are still waiting.
“We just waited for no explanation. He was constantly telling us to wait, and now it’s too late,” Ryan said.
A spokesman for the Ministry of Defense said he did not comment on individual cases. “We remain fully committed to honor our commitments to all eligible people who pass their appropriate movement checks,” the statement added.
The situation becomes more worrying than the fact that the details of the family are among the nearly 19,000 Afghans who have applied for resettlement in the UK, who inadvertently have expired in February 2022. Families involved in the fear of leakage made them vulnerable.
Ryan is already a terrified police will return to detain him, his wife and their child afterwards, and said that he is praying with the British Supreme Committee in Islamabad to be moved to another protection hotel.
Calvin Bailey, a Labor MP who works with Afghan threes as a RAF commander, told the BBC that the situation was “incredibly disruptive.” He said Ryan’s father and the triplers are “people we need to help and owe a debt and have to ensure that they receive more than minimal protection.”
Bailey continued to add that she hoped the government and the British Supreme Commission will engage behind the scenes, although this job is not always public.
Pakistan has long records in Afghan refugees. Earlier, the government said it was disappointed with the length of time that the Afghans had taken to be moved to other countries.
Pakistan Interior Minister, Talal Chatri, told the BBC that he “should ask the United Kingdom authorities why they slow down these migrations.”
“Years have passed already,” he said. “Do you really think that they will give some leniency to the Pakistani citizens who are overdone in the UK?”
As of September 2023, the year Pakistan has launched its “repatriation plan of illegal foreigners”, 1,159 812 persons have persons Returned to AfghanistanAccording to the Migration Agency of the United Nations.
The government maintains that its policy is aimed at all illegal foreign citizens.
About three million Afghans live in Pakistan, according to the UN Refugee Agency – including about 600,000 people who came after the ingestion of the Taliban in 2021, the UN estimates that half are undocumented.
The United Nations Refugee Agency (UNCBA) has called on Pakistan to “guarantee that any return of Afghans to Afghanistan is voluntary, safe and decent.”
Against the backdrop of police raids and deportations this summer, the UNHC has called on the government to “apply measures to release Afghans with continuous needs for international protection against involuntary returns.”
Additional reporting from USMan Zahid