Afghan outcasts get comfortable in a camp close to the Torkham Pakistan-Afghanistan line in Torkham, Afghanistan. (AP)

 Pakistan: Attock organization shifts 2500 afghan exiles to travel camps



2,500 unlawful Afghan workers have been moved to the travel camp during the biometric confirmation of the unlawful outsiders remaining in the area.

In the midst of the cutoff time for Afghans to deliberately return lapsed on October 31, Pakistan's Punjab area organization has moved more than 2500 undocumented Afghans to travel camp from different pieces of Attock for extradition, ARY News gave an account of Sunday.


Afghan outcasts get comfortable in a camp close to the Torkham Pakistan-Afghanistan line in Torkham, Afghanistan. (AP)

Afghan evacuees get comfortable in a camp close to the Torkham Pakistan-Afghanistan line in Torkham, Afghanistan. (AP)


As per agent Magistrate Attock, 2,500 unlawful Afghan workers have been moved to the travel camp during the biometric check of the unlawful outsiders remaining in the area.


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The Pakistan-based news source revealed that Guardian Clergyman for Inside Sarfraz Ahmed Bugti has coordinated the specialists worried about figuring out a far-reaching system for the bringing home of outsiders dwelling unlawfully in Pakistan.


In the meantime, Afghanistan State head Mullah Mohammad Hassan Akhund said that Pakistan's activity is against worldwide regulations, revealed TOLO News.


PM Akhund in a video message, pursued Pakistan to not "oust Afghans in an undignified way, to not hassle Afghans and to give them adequate time so they can return in a stately way."


"In the event that their (Pakistan) reason is to remove undocumented transients just, for what reason are they embarrassing the outcasts, taking their property, and annihilating their homes?" he added.

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