ISLAMABAD (AP) — A quarter of a million Afghan children need education, food and homes after being forcibly returned from Pakistan, a nongovernmental organization said Thursday.
Pakistan is cracking down on foreigners it alleges are in the country illegally, including 1.7 million Afghans. It insists the campaign is not directed against Afghans specifically, but they make up most of the foreigners in the country.
More than 520,000 Afghans have left Pakistan since last October.
Save the Children said families are entering Afghanistan with “virtually nothing” and that nearly half of all returnees are children.
A survey of families by the NGO said nearly all of them lacked enough food for the next one to two months. Some returnees and host families had to borrow money for food or rely on friends and relatives for food.
Almost two thirds of children who have returned to Afghanistan have not been enrolled in school, according to Save the Children. The majority told the organization they don’t have the necessary documents to register and enroll in school. In Pakistan, more than two-thirds of these children had been attending school, it said.
Man granted parole for his role in the 2001 stabbing deaths of 2 Dartmouth College professors
China Focus: Martial Arts Growing in Popularity Among Young Chinese
Activities Held to Celebrate Hua Zhao Jie in Hangzhou, E China
J.K. Dobbins signs with Chargers, continuing the trend of former Ravens heading to LA
As Population Grays, Average Life Expectancy Rises
Grocery Store in Rural China Now Community E
Spinning Top Competition Held to Celebrate Upcoming Int'l Women's Day in S China's Guangxi
Intangible Cultural Heritage Inheritors Bask in the Spotlight
University of Oregon football player, 19, is arrested for fatal hit and run after 46
Mask Mandate Dropped for School Campuses