Six Afghan families with ties to Canada have been deported from Pakistan, veterans group says - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 01:05 AM | Calgary | -16.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Six Afghan families with ties to Canada have been deported from Pakistan, veterans group says

Six Afghan families with ties toCanada have been deported from Pakistan back to Afghanistan, a Canadian veterans group says.

Minister says deportations are throwing up roadblocks as Ottawa works to bring migrants here

Afghan children huddle around a campfire.
Afghan refugee children warm themselves in a camp near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in Torkham, Afghanistan on Nov. 4, 2023. (Ebrahim Noroozi/The Associated Press)

Six Afghan families with ties toCanada have been deported from Pakistan back to Afghanistan, a Canadian veteransgroup says.

"I'm extremely concerned by the current stance that Pakistan has taken to deport Afghans out of the country," said Jon Feltham, an Afghan war veteran and program director for Aman Lara, a non-profit that works to evacuate people from countries in crisis.

"We're taking them out of one hotspot and what we're doing now is we're putting them into another."

Feltham said the deportations underscore the urgent need for Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) to speed up its processing of paperwork for Afghans trying to come to this country.

At the end of October,Pakistan began rounding up,detainingand deportingthose it callsundocumented Afghan migrants.

It's not clear how many Afghans are trying to come to Canada under special immigration measures for former employees of the Canadian Armed Forces or the federal government. Citing operational security,IRCC has refused to disclose the number.

Aman Lara estimates it has helped nearly 2,500 Afghans who have what it calls an "enduring relationship with the government of Canada" to temporarily relocate to Pakistan while they wait on next steps.

The organization said it could not provide an exact head count for the six families. It saidthe United Nations estimates an average Afghan householdincludes eight people.

Dropped at the border

CBC News spoke to one man who said he was arrested on Monday in Islamabad while on an errand with hiswife. Sanaullah Azizi said he and his wifewere transported by bus for 17 hours with other migrants before being droppedat the border withAfghanistan.

Azizisaid he was in Pakistan hoping to getapproval to move to Canada based on the work of his father-in-law, a former interpreter with the Canadian Armed Forces.

IRCC has been asking Canada-bound Afghans to warn it immediately if they are detained. The department also has suggested that migrants should show documentation to police in Pakistan to provethey're headed forCanada and should not be deported.

WATCH | Ottawa says it's trying to get more Afghans out of Pakistan:

Afghans with ties to Canada deported from Pakistan

10 months ago
Duration 1:50
A Canadian veterans group says roughly 50 Afghans with ties to Canada have been deported from Pakistan back to Afghanistan. Ottawa says it is trying to process claims faster during the crackdown.

Azizi said he never got the chance.

"They snatched my phone right away," he told CBC News through an interpreter. He said the device was his only means of reaching the outside worldand had all of his documents loaded on it.

He said it was only returned after they were dropped off at the border. He saidhe and his wife have been in hiding in Afghanistan ever since.

IRCC still working on further flights out of Pakistan

Immigration Canada has managed to get Afghans on two charter flights out of Islamabad since Pakistan began its crackdown at the start of November.

At a news conference on Friday, Immigration Minister Marc Miller told journalists the government is trying to arrange more flights out.

"It is very much a day-by-day thing ... but weagain try to exhaust all options to make sure this is done as quickly as possible," he said.

He admitted the deportations are throwing up new challenges.

"Our operational ability to work in Afghanistan is extremely limited," he said.

Armed men in fatigues walk through a refugee camp.
Taliban fighters stand guard as Afghan refugees line up to register in a camp near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in Torkham, Afghanistan on Nov. 4, 2023. (Ebrahim Noroozi/Associated Press)

Azizigave CBC News a copy of a letter he received from Immigration Canada after he was able to contact the department following his deportation.

"We understand that you are currently back in Afghanistan and you are facing difficulties due to the security situation in the country," the letter says. "We encourage you to take appropriate measures to ensure your and your family's safety and security."

The letter asks Azizifor updates in the event of changes in his personal circumstances, contact details or physical location.

Aman Lara said it is encouraging Afghans who have been in touch with the organization and subsequently deported to get in touch so that it can work on getting them out of Afghanistan.