The Mine, which is pregnant, has been waiting for a flight from Islamabad for six months. She is worried that her terror threatens her unborn baby. “When I lose a baby, I will kill myself,” she said the BBC.
She says she previously protested for women’s rights, even after the Taliban government took control of Afghanistan. She claims she was arrested in 2023 and detained for the night.
“Even then, I didn’t want to leave Afghanistan. I was hiding after being released, but they called me and told me the next time they would kill me,” she says.
The mine is worried that the Pakistani government will send her back to Afghanistan. This is partly because Pakistan will not give the refugees of Afghanistan indefinitely.
For decades, hundreds of thousands of refugees have taken the country in the region. According to the UN refugee agency, there are three million Afghan citizens in the country, about 1.4 million of whom have been documented.
As the cross -border tension with the Taliban government broke out, in Pakistan, concerns about the fate of Afghans in Pakistan increased, with reports of alleged intimidation and detention. The UN Special Rapporteur said he was concerned, and Afghans in the region deserve better treatment.
The Pakistan government states that the expulsion of foreign nationals who illegally returned to Afghanistan and confirmed search raids in January.
According to moms, more than 795,000 Afghans have been expelled from Pakistan since September last year.
The Afghan refugees we talked about to feel that it gets between their homeland, where their life is in danger, and the mosquito country whose patience ended.
They expressed hopes for the US – but it seemed safe harbor was sharply blocked by the new president to further notice.