Pakistan blocks passports of over 10,000 citizens deported from Iran

According to sources in Pakistan’s Interior Ministry, passports of 10,454 individuals have been blocked after they were arrested by the Iranian authorities for illegally crossing into their territory.

Islamabad: Pakistan has blocked passports of over 10,000 of its citizens, who have been deported from Iran after getting caught while trying to use the route to enter Europe illegally. The move comes as part of the government’s action against illegal human traffickers in the country, initiated after over 40 Pakistanis died recently when a boat carrying illegal immigrants capsized in Greek territorial waters.

According to sources in Pakistan’s Interior Ministry, passports of 10,454 individuals have been blocked after they were arrested by the Iranian authorities for illegally crossing into their territory. “These individuals tried to enter Iran from Pakistan’s Balochistan and its porous borders. Their final destination was Europe.

They were being trafficked by local handlers in Pakistan, Iran and had more contacts waiting ahead to help them reach Europe illegally,” a ministry official told IANS. “After their arrest, these individuals were handed over to Pakistani officials at the Taftan border in Balochistan’s Chagai district,” he added. The arrests highlights the alarming number of people desirous of using illegal means to leave Pakistan and reach Europe via Iran.

The Ministry of Interior maintained that it is in process of blocking passports of thousands of more individuals arrested and deported from other countries. Already, as per sources, at least 2,470 passports of individuals involved in drug-related crimes in the UAE have been blocked while 1,500 passports of individuals deported from Iraq and over 4,000 passports of people detained in Saudi Arabia have also been blocked.

Majority of these individuals belong to Pakistan’s Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province. “Majority of the people caught taking such a dangerous, unpredictable and unconventional route are youngsters, including several minors,” said Syed Liaqat Banori, Chairman, Society of Human Rights and Prisoners’ Aid (SHARP) Pakistan.

“Shockingly, families of these individuals support their actions even while knowing that they are risking their lives in the process. The human trafficking network is also massive and spread across different countries,” he stated.