GOODBYE TO AFGHANS: WHAT IS THE PROMISE OF HUMAN RIGHTS TO HUMAN RIGHTSLESSNESS AFGHAN MIGRANTS IN PAKISTAN?
Author: Sayed Qudrat Hashimy
Published by: SQ Hashimy
Free access
The Genealogies of complicity and the Afghanistan and Pakistan struggle date back to an 1893 single-page Agreement (Duran line) and the invasion by the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) in 1979. The squabble of the World towards Pakistan with its inglorious policy to deport undocumented 1.7 million refugees to a war-stricken country is inhuman and treats them as political pawns. The Mass Exodus of Afghan Refugees and the anti-immigrant policy of Pakistan trigger some legal questions: Why is Pakistan deporting Afghans at this point? Who hears the voice of suffering at the dark noon? What happens next to these deportees? The existing article is poignant in examining the status of human rightslessness of sans-papiers under the human rights paradigm in Pakistan. In tandem with this, the paper also examines the human rights dimension from the lens of the perplexing situation that prevails in Afghanistan. This article is percolated by axiomatic development in the theory and practice of human rights supplanted by wretched migrants. Thus, this paper offers a series of thoughts concerning ways of understanding the changing human rights paradigms in Afghans.
Afghan refugees, Afghan crisis, Afghanistan and Pakistan relations, Afghanistan and Pakistan conflicts
Short address: https://sciup.org/13011271
IDR: 13011271 | UDC: International Journal of Law in Changing World