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Afghan PM condemns Pakistan’s ‘unilateral’ deportations

Afghan PM condemns Pakistan’s ‘unilateral’ deportations
This handout photograph taken on April 19, 2025, and released by Afghanistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs shows the country's Prime Minister Hassan Akhund (R) and Pakistan's Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar during a bilateral meeting in Kabul. (AFP/Afghanistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs)
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Updated 20 April 2025

Afghan PM condemns Pakistan’s ‘unilateral’ deportations

Afghan PM condemns Pakistan’s ‘unilateral’ deportations
  • Pakistan has launched strict campaign to evict by end of month more than 800,000 Afghans
  • Afghan PM Hasan Akhund urges Pakistan government to facilitate “dignified return” of refugees

KABUL: Afghanistan’s prime minister condemned on Saturday the “unilateral measures” taken by Pakistan to forcibly deport tens of thousands of Afghans since the start of April.

Pakistan has launched a strict campaign to evict by the end of the month more than 800,000 Afghans who have had their residence permits canceled, including some who were born in Pakistan or lived there for decades.

Pakistan’s top diplomat Ishaq Dar flew to Kabul for a day-long visit on Saturday where he held discussions with Afghan Taliban officials, including Prime Minister Hasan Akhund and Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi.

“Rather than collaborating with the Islamic Emirate on the gradual repatriation process, Pakistan’s unilateral measures are intensifying the problem and hindering progress toward a solution,” Akhund said during his meeting with Dar.

He urged the Pakistani government to “facilitate the dignified return of Afghan refugees,” according to a statement on X.

Earlier, foreign minister Muttaqi “expressed his deep concern and disappointment over the situation and forced deportation of Afghan refugees in Pakistan,” the ministry’s deputy spokesperson Zia Ahmad said on X.

Ahmad added that Dar had reassured officials that Afghans “will not be mistreated.”

Afghans in Pakistan have reported weeks of arbitrary arrests, extortion and harassment by authorities.

Islamabad has said nearly 85,000 have already crossed into Afghanistan, with convoys of Afghan families heading to border crossings each day fearing raids, arrests or separation from family members.




Afghan refugees load their belongings onto a truck as they prepare for their deportation to Afghanistan, at the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in Torkham on April 19, 2025. (AFP)

On Friday, Pakistan’s deputy interior minister Tallal Chaudhry told a news conference that “there will not be any sort of leniency and extension in the deadline.”

The relationship between the two neighbors has soured as attacks in Pakistan’s border regions have soared following the return of the Taliban government in Afghanistan in 2021.

Last year was the deadliest in Pakistan for a decade, with Islamabad accusing Kabul of allowing militants to take refuge in Afghanistan, from where they plan attacks.

The Taliban government denies the charge.

Chaudhry said on Friday that nearly 85,000 Afghans have crossed into Afghanistan since the start of April, the majority of them undocumented.

More than half of them were children, according to the United Nations refugee agency.

The women and girls among those crossing were entering a country where they are banned from education beyond secondary school and barred from many sectors of work.

Afghanistan’s refugees ministry spokesman told AFP on Saturday the Taliban authorities had recorded some 71,000 Afghan returnees through the two main border points with Pakistan between April 1 and 18.

In the first phase of returns in 2023, hundreds of thousands of undocumented Afghans were forced across the border in the space of a few weeks.

In the second phase announced in March, the Pakistan government canceled the residence permits of more than 800,000 Afghans and warned thousands more awaiting relocation to other countries to leave by the end of April.

The move to expel Afghans is widely supported by Pakistanis.

“They are totally disrespectful toward our country. They have abused us, they have used us. One can’t live in a country if they don’t respect it,” said Ahmad Waleed, standing in his shop on Friday in Rawalpindi, near the capital.


Pakistan stocks brace for ‘bumpy ride’ amid fears of tax-heavy, IMF-driven budget

Pakistan stocks brace for ‘bumpy ride’ amid fears of tax-heavy, IMF-driven budget
Updated 53 sec ago

Pakistan stocks brace for ‘bumpy ride’ amid fears of tax-heavy, IMF-driven budget

Pakistan stocks brace for ‘bumpy ride’ amid fears of tax-heavy, IMF-driven budget
  • Small investors urge government to exempt dividends from taxes, cut brokers’ commission
  • Some analysts say the government seeks to offer investor relief but needs IMF approval

KARACHI: Pakistan’s stock market is expected to experience a “bumpy ride” in the coming days due to what some analysts on Monday described as a challenging new budget the South Asian nation is set to announce next month in line with recommendations from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s administration has been in talks with the IMF over its new fiscal plan, though the Fund’s team left Pakistan last week without reaching an agreement on key issues, including higher defense spending and the proposed taxation of agricultural income.

As a result, the benchmark KSE-100 Index remained largely flat in recent days and slipped 0.7 percent to 118,221 points on Monday, following rumors that the government planned to raise the Capital Gains Tax (CGT) on share trading income.

“Given the new measures that have been IMF-driven and that are impacting sentiment at the stock exchange, we are expecting some bumpy rides and [do] not [expect] a clean ride up like we saw in the prior year,” Ahsan Mehanti, chief executive officer at Arif Habib Commodities, told Arab News in an interview.

Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb is expected to present the new budget on June 10 in Pakistan’s National Assembly, the parliament’s lower house, after the government postponed its earlier budget date of May 2 by nearly a week.

SMALL INVESTORS

The prevailing uncertainty has kept small investors like Abdur Rauf and Jawed Khanani from buying stocks, fearing an unfavorable outcome from the ongoing budget talks between the government and the IMF.

“If the budget turns out negative for the market, our money will get stuck,” said Rauf, a 68-year-old retailer, who said his “investment level has come down to 25 percent due to the budget factor.”

He maintained the government, by taxing bonus shares, was discouraging listed companies from issuing them to shareholders.

“They [the companies] are now giving dividends, which too have been taxed at 15 percent for tax filers and 30 percent for non-filers,” he said, adding, “after deducting the dividend tax and members’ [brokers’] commission, the investor is left with little money.”

Due to heavy taxation, small investors, mostly households and retired salaried individuals, have almost disappeared from the equity market, while large investors are also operating under pressure.

“The government should exempt dividends [from taxes], reduce the [brokers’] commission and abolish the tax on bonus shares so that investors could get some relief from companies and fresh investments could come to the market,” Rauf told Arab News.

Khanani also expressed concern over rumors of increased tax on dividend income and hoped the new budget would bring down existing tax rates.

“People hope that the [existing] 15 percent CGT on non-filers [of tax] should be brought down to 12 percent or 10 percent,” he said, seated in a small trading booth at the Pakistan Stock Exchange’s main trading hall.

GROWTH-ORIENTED OR CHALLENGING BUDGET?

Meanwhile, big market players like Arif Habib, chairman of the Arif Habib Group, one of Pakistan’s leading business conglomerates, are optimistic the government will unveil a growth-oriented budget after stabilizing the economy over the past year.

“You see, after the [economic] stabilization, the market expectations are that the new policies would be for the growth in the economy,” he told Arab News in an interview.

Regarding high taxes, he said the government was “very much concerned that the taxation rates in Pakistan are high” and would aim to provide maximum relief to investors and the general public if the IMF agrees to its proposals.

Habib, who is believed to have close connections in policymaking circles, informed the IMF’s broader conditions hinge on the size of the budget deficit.

“The Pakistani side wants to have some aggressive approach,” he continued. “They wish that we may, in fact, incur some budget deficit, higher budget deficit, but give relief to the investors and to the general public.”

However, he noted this would depend on the IMF’s approval of a fiscal gap figure the Sharif government may be proposing for the next year.

“Now the number in fact being discussed in the market is about 5.1 percent or 4.9 percent,” he said.

Habib said he sees no “element of harshness” in the new budget but noted that the key question for the government is how much relief it can offer the market.

“Expectations are high,” he added. “And if those are not met, then the markets would not, in fact, be happy about it.”

Analyst Mehanti offered a contrasting view, saying higher taxes are likely for sectors listed on the PSX.

“It will be a very, you know, challenging budget,” he said. “We are expecting, you know, higher levies for oils, fertilizer, stock market and real estate.”


‘Posterity won’t forgive us’: Pakistan urges world powers to secure ceasefire for Gaza

‘Posterity won’t forgive us’: Pakistan urges world powers to secure ceasefire for Gaza
Updated 26 min 45 sec ago

‘Posterity won’t forgive us’: Pakistan urges world powers to secure ceasefire for Gaza

‘Posterity won’t forgive us’: Pakistan urges world powers to secure ceasefire for Gaza
  • Israel’s military offensive has killed 53,900 Palestinians since Oct. 2023, according to Gaza health authorities
  • With food still critically short after nearly three-month blockade, Washington says it is working to restore ceasefire

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Monday called on international powers to ensure a lasting and immediate ceasefire in Gaza, warning that “posterity will not forgive us” if Israel’s military offensive in the besieged enclave continued.

Fierce Israeli attacks are ongoing, including most recently on a school building where dozens of Palestinians sheltering inside were killed.

With food still critically short after a nearly three-month blockade, Washington says it is working to restore a ceasefire more than 19 months into the war, but progress is elusive.

“We condemn the untold stories of miseries and atrocities in the land of Gaza where more than 50,000 Palestinians have been martyred and as I speak this story of bloodbath continues,” Sharif said in Tehran at a joint press conference with Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian.

“It’s high time that international community uses its influence to bring ceasefire and lasting ceasefire in that part of the world, otherwise posterity will not forgive us.”

Israel launched its latest air and ground war in Gaza after a cross-border attack by the Hamas group on October 7, 2023, which killed 1,200 people by Israeli tallies, with 251 hostages abducted into Gaza. The war has killed more than 53,900 Palestinians since, according to Gaza health authorities, and devastated the coastal strip. 

The entire 2.1 million population of Gaza is facing prolonged food shortages, with nearly half a million people in a catastrophic situation of hunger, acute malnutrition, starvation, illness and death, according to the World Health Organization. Food security groups say more than 93 percent of children in Gaza, about 930,000, are at risk of famine. Using satellite data, the United Nations estimated in February that 69 percent of the structures in Gaza have been damaged or destroyed.

With most of Gaza’s two million population squeezed into an ever narrowing zone on the coast and in the area around the southern city of Khan Younis by Israel’s military operation, international pressure to get aid in quickly has ratcheted up.

Israel’s initial blockade on Gaza, immediately following the October 7 attacks, prevented the entry of humanitarian aid for several weeks. As the war progressed, aid has been allowed in limited quantities.

Israel has recently announced that a new aid system, sponsored by the United States and run by private contractors, will soon begin operations from four distribution centers in the south of Gaza, but many details of how the system will work remain unclear. The UN has already said it will not work with the new system, which it says will leave aid distribution conditional on Israel’s political and military aims.

Israel says its forces will only provide security for the centers and will not distribute aid themselves.

Even as the aid has begun to slowly trickle in, the Israeli military has continued its intensified ground and air operation launched last week, which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said would end with Israel taking full control of the Gaza Strip.


Pakistan’s moon sighting committee to meet today to determine Eid Al-Adha dates

Pakistan’s moon sighting committee to meet today to determine Eid Al-Adha dates
Updated 52 min 3 sec ago

Pakistan’s moon sighting committee to meet today to determine Eid Al-Adha dates

Pakistan’s moon sighting committee to meet today to determine Eid Al-Adha dates
  • Eid Al-Adha is expected to fall on June 7 this year
  • Annual Hajj pilgrimage will commence on June 4

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s moon sighting committee will meet in Islamabad today, Tuesday, to observe the crescent marking the beginning of the Islamic month of Dhul Hijjah and announce the dates for the Eid Al-Adha festival, the ministry of religious affairs said.

Dhul Hijjah is the twelfth and final month of the Islamic calendar, a sacred month during which the Hajj pilgrimage and Eid Al-Adha, the Festival of Sacrifice, take place. It is considered one of the four holy months in the Islamic calendar, with its first ten days particularly revered and considered the best days of the year for performing righteous deeds. 

Commemorating the willingness of Prophet Ibrahim to sacrifice his son on God’s command, Muslims mark the Eid Al-Adha holiday by slaughtering animals such as sheep, cows and goats. The meat is shared among family and friends and also donated to the poor.

Eid Al-Adha is observed on the 10th day of Dhul Hijjah.

“The meeting of Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee for sighting the moon of Dhul Hijjah 1446 AH will be held in the evening of Tuesday, May 27, 2025, at Islamabad,” the ministry of religious affairs said in a notification. 

Meetings of the zonal and district committees would also be held at their respective headquarters in parallel, it added. 

The chairman of Pakistan’s moon sighting committee would subsequently announce a decision on the date for Eid Al-Adha based on testimonies received from different corners of the country about the sighting of the new crescent.

Eid Al-Adha is expected to fall on June 7 this year while the annual Hajj pilgrimage will commence on June 4.


Chinese official discusses security with delegation from Pakistan’s Balochistan

Chinese official discusses security with delegation from Pakistan’s Balochistan
Updated 26 May 2025

Chinese official discusses security with delegation from Pakistan’s Balochistan

Chinese official discusses security with delegation from Pakistan’s Balochistan
  • Chinese nationals have been in crosshairs of separatist militants in Balochistan where China has a strategic port and mining interests
  • Beijing has been pushing Pakistan to allow its own security staff to provide protection to thousands of Chinese citizens working there

BEIJING: China’s Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs Liu Bin met with a delegation from Pakistan’s southwestern province of Balochistan on Monday, according to a ministry statement.

The two sides exchanged views on issues including security and cooperation between China and the province.

Chinese nationals have been in the crosshairs of separatist militants who believe Beijing is helping Pakistan exploit minerals in the underdeveloped province of Balochistan, where China has a strategic port and mining interests.

Beijing has been pushing Pakistan to allow its own security staff to provide protection to thousands of Chinese citizens working there, frustrated by the string of attacks on its citizens.

The push came after a bombing at the Karachi airport last October killed two Chinese engineers who were returning there to work at a power plant.


Pakistan says IMF approved $1 billion loan tranche ‘on merit’ despite Indian push for review

Pakistan says IMF approved $1 billion loan tranche ‘on merit’ despite Indian push for review
Updated 26 May 2025

Pakistan says IMF approved $1 billion loan tranche ‘on merit’ despite Indian push for review

Pakistan says IMF approved $1 billion loan tranche ‘on merit’ despite Indian push for review
  • India has raised concerns with IMF on its loans to Pakistan after militant attack Delhi blamed on Islamabad
  • Last week, India announced plans to approach Financial Action Task Force to place Pakistan on grey list again

ISLAMABAD: Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said on Monday the International Monetary Fund (IMF) had approved a $1 billion disbursement for Pakistan on “merit” despite India leaving “no stone unturned” to convince the lender to review the payout.

Pakistan secured a $7 billion bailout program from the IMF last year and was granted a new $1.3 billion climate resilience loan in March. Earlier this month, Pakistan received the second tranche of special drawing rights worth $1,023 million from the IMF under the extended fund facility (EFF) program, bringing disbursements to $2 billion within the latest bailout. 

The program is critical to the $350 billion economy and Pakistan has said it has stabilized under the bailout that helped it stave off a default threat.

India raised concerns with the IMF on its loans to Pakistan, asking for a review earlier this month as tensions soared after an attack on Hindu tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir that New Delhi blamed on Islamabad — an accusation it denies. The tensions erupted into military fighting as the two nuclear-armed nations launched missiles and drones deep into each other’s territories and exchanged gunfire on their de facto border, the Line of Control, until a ceasefire was announced on May 10. Nearly 70 people combined were killed on both sides of the border.

“Our armed forces and political leadership, the way they stood up against the [Indian] aggression, the entire nation has celebrated it, and rightly so,” Aurangzeb told reporters in Islamabad. 

“At the same time, there was no stone left unturned in terms of ensuring that the [IMF board] meeting doesn’t happen and if the meeting does happen, then these items are not on the agenda, whether it’s the second tranche [of $7 billion loan] under the EFF or the RSF [Resilience and Sustainability Facility] of $1.3 billion in terms of our climate resilient facility.”

The finance minister said he was thankful that the IMF went on to discuss and decide the Pakistan case “on merit.”

Last week, India also announced plans to approach the global financial watchdog, the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), to place Pakistan on its grey list and said it would oppose a World Bank plan to focus $20 billion in lending to the cash-strapped nation over the coming decade on development issues like the impact of climate change as well as boosting private-sector growth.

Pakistan was removed from the FATF grey list in 2022, receiving a clean bill of health on terror financing, which significantly improved its standing with international lenders, crucial for its crisis-hit economy.