Thousands of Pakistani Vehicles Stuck at Afghanistan Border After Dropping Migrants

By Fidel Rahmati

Nearly 18,000 Pakistani vehicles remain stranded in Spin Boldak after transporting Afghan migrants, as border restrictions and mass deportations worsen humanitarian and economic pressures.

Nearly 18,000 Pakistani vehicles that carried Afghan migrants to the border are now stranded in Spin Boldak, unable to return due to restrictions by Pakistani authorities.

Local sources report that the backlog has sent transport fares soaring, leaving deported families facing heavy financial strain as they attempt to rebuild their lives inside Afghanistan.

Drivers of these vehicles, commonly known in Pakistan as Artal, say they have been stuck on Afghanistan soil for weeks, unable to resume work.

Neither Taliban officials nor the Pakistani government have issued any formal response to the worsening gridlock or its growing humanitarian and economic consequences.

Pakistan has recently accelerated deportations of undocumented Afghans. According to the Taliban’s refugee commission, up to 6,000 people are expelled daily through crossings such as Spin Boldak.

The mass stranding of vehicles underscores the deepening fallout of Pakistan’s deportation campaign, with ripple effects for drivers, border communities, and returning Afghan families.

Unless urgent coordination is established between Islamabad and Kabul, the crisis risks worsening further, intensifying hardship on both sides of the border and destabilising local economies.

Thousands of Pakistani Vehicles Stuck at Afghanistan Border After Dropping Migrants