The Peshawar Excessive Courtroom (PHC) issued a two-page interim order on Friday stopping the pressured repatriation of round 150 Afghan singers and musicians who fled to Pakistan after the Taliban’s return to energy in 2021, in response to native media.
Justice Wiqar Ahmad, who presided over the case, instructed the federal government to determine the musicians’ asylum purposes inside two months. The courtroom mentioned that if the asylum claims aren’t resolved inside 60 days, the inside ministry’s secretary ought to grant permission for the petitioners to remain for a interval enough to succeed in a remaining determination. The courtroom additionally allowed the musicians to use to the UN Excessive Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to course of their asylum claims.
The musicians filed a petition final 12 months, citing fears of persecution below the Taliban, who banned music and suppressed artists throughout their first time period in energy from 1996 to 2001. For the reason that Taliban’s takeover of the Afghanistan authorities in August 2021, musicians within the nation have expressed fears of renewed suppression.
Based on the UNHCR, Pakistan has an extended historical past of providing safety to refugees and asylum seekers. As of October 2024, an estimated 1.5 million Afghan refugees and asylum seekers in want of safety had been residing in Pakistan.
Pakistan, nonetheless, lacks a proper nationwide asylum system and isn’t a signatory to the 1951 Refugee Conference. The UNHCR continues to advocate for improved entry to primary rights for refugees and asylum seekers in Pakistan. Particularly, the UNHCR has considerably expanded its safety applications in response to Pakistan’s current Unlawful Foreigners Repatriation Plan (IFRP), which topics “undocumented” Afghan refugees to deportation.
Amnesty Worldwide denounced the IFRP on Wednesday, calling on the Pakistani authorities to uphold its worldwide human rights obligations and shield Afghan refugees. The rights group condemned current reviews of arbitrary detentions and harassment in opposition to Afghan refugees, stating: “All refugees and asylum seekers, no matter documentation standing, have the proper to due course of and safety in opposition to pressured return in worldwide human rights legislation.”
In mild of the rising fears of deportation, Afghan musicians welcomed the courtroom’s determination as a “ray of hope” providing aid to their group. Musician Zarwali Afghan said: “We had been in worry, however the current determination of the courtroom has sparked happiness amongst our group … We hope that the federal government will think about our circumstances on humanitarian grounds.”


















