ICE arrests of Afghans are on the rise in the wake of National Guard attack, immigration lawyers say

By SAHAR AKBARZAIMARTHA BELLISLEREBECCA SANTANA and JULIE WATSON

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — On a recent afternoon, Giselle Garcia, a volunteer who has been helping an Afghan family resettle, drove the father to a check-in with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. She warned him and his family to prepare for the worst.

The moment the father stepped into the ICE office in California’s capital city, he was arrested.

Coming just days after the shooting of two National Guard troops by an Afghan national suspect, federal authorities have carried out increased arrests of Afghans in the U.S., immigration lawyers say as Afghans both in and outside the country have come under intense scrutiny by immigration officials.

Garcia said the family she helped had reported to all their appointments and were following all legal requirements.

“He was trying to be strong for his wife and kids in the car, but the anxiety and fear were palpable,” she said. “His wife was trying to hold back tears, but I could see her in the rearview mirror silently crying.”

They had fled Afghanistan under threat by the Taliban because the wife’s father had assisted the U.S. military, and they had asked for asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border, Garcia said. She is not identifying him or his family for fear other members could be arrested.

Afghan men arrested in wake of shooting

Since the Nov. 26 Guard shooting, The Associated Press has tracked roughly two dozen arrests of Afghan immigrants, most of which happened in Northern California. In Sacramento, home to one of the nation’s largest Afghan communities, volunteers monitoring ICE activities say they witnessed at least nine arrests at the federal building last week after Afghan men received calls to check in there.

Many of those detained had requested asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border in the last two years. Others were among the 76,000 Afghans brought to the U.S. under Operation Allies Welcome, created by former President Joe Biden’s administration after the chaotic withdrawal of the U.S. from their country.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Dec. 1 that the Trump administration is “actively reexamining” all the Afghan nationals who entered the U.S. during Biden’s administration.

The AP couldn’t independently determine each of the Afghans’ immigration statuses or the reasons put forward by authorities for their arrests. In one case, the man had been arrested twice on suspicion of domestic violence, according to the government.

Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland, said in an email that the agency “has been going full throttle on identifying and arresting known or suspected terrorists and criminal illegal aliens that came in through Biden’s fraudulent parole programs and working to get the criminals and public safety threats OUT of our country.”

Rahmanullah Lakanwal, the 29-year-old Afghan suspect in the shooting, was granted asylum earlier this year, according to advocate group #AfghanEvac.

Critics say Afghans paying price for one bad actor

Since the shooting, the U.S. government introduced sweeping immigration changes, including pausing asylum applications and requiring increased vetting for immigrants from certain countries. The administration also took steps specifically targeted at Afghans, including pausing all their immigration-related applications and visas for Afghans who closely helped the war effort.

Those who work with Afghans say the stepped-up enforcement amounts to the collective punishment of a population, many of whom risked their lives to protect U.S. troops.

“Not to discount the horrific killing that happened, but that was one bad actor who should be prosecuted by the full extent of the law,” Democratic Rep. Ami Bera, whose California district includes Sacramento, said of Lakanwal. “A lot of these people kept our troops safe and served side by side with our soldiers for two decades in Afghanistan.”

Cuffed after reporting to ICE

In Sacramento, Afghan men arrived one by one to the ICE office Dec. 1 after being asked to immediately report there, drawing the attention of volunteers who have been at the federal building for more than six months to monitor ICE activities and alert immigrants.

As each man entered the office, agents handcuffed them, said Garcia, a volunteer with NorCal Resist.

“What we saw on Monday was an influx of Afghan immigrants called randomly starting at 6 a.m. and asked to do a check-in and report immediately,” Garcia said. “Most of these Afghan men already had ankle monitors on them.”

Her organization’s volunteers witnessed ICE arrest six Afghans that day.

Arrests and cancellations cause fear

In Des Moines, Iowa, Ann Naffier, with the Iowa Migrant Movement for Justice, said her Afghan client was detained Dec. 2 on the way to work by agents who called him a “terrorist.” He was held for two hours before he was released with an apology.

Wahida Noorzad is an immigration attorney in Northern California who has two Afghan clients who were arrested last week by ICE. Both entered the U.S. in recent years through the southern border. One used the app set up by the Biden administration to make an appointment to request asylum at the border.

Noorzad felt both had strong cases to eventually be granted asylum in the U.S. She also said she found no criminal records for them.

Spojmie Nasiri, another immigration attorney in Northern California, said she’s received numerous calls from worried Afghans, including a man who called her terrified as agents stood outside his home. He put her on speaker phone so she could tell them that her client was a U.S. citizen.

Iqbal Wafa, an Afghan immigration consultant in Sacramento, said officials told his client when he went to his appointment last week that interviews for Afghans are canceled, and he observed interviews for other Afghan immigrants were canceled as well inside the federal building in Sacramento.

His client, who asked to be identified only by his last name, Mohammadi, out of fear his comments could affect the safety of relatives in Afghanistan, said he came to the U.S. with his family in 2017 after working as a security guard for both the U.S. Army Corps of Engineering and the U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan for 12 years. He said he watched last week as other people who weren’t Afghans went into their interviews before learning his was canceled.

“I started thinking, ‘I haven’t done anything,’” Mohammadi said. He said he felt betrayed after the hard work that led up to the interview for U.S. citizenship. “What will happen to our futures?”

Rohullah R., 30, wondered the same. He worked at an animal shelter in Kabul, Afghanistan, and came to the U.S. in 2024 after being sponsored by a New York animal welfare organization. He did not want his last name used out of fear it would harm his case. He said the pause on his green card application process has “created a lot of challenges” and for many Afghans like him their “spirit is down.”

A family left crying

Garcia said she listened through the wall of the waiting room at the ICE office and heard agents handcuff the father of the family she was helping.

“I’m screaming his rights through the wall so he could hear me. ‘Remain silent! Please don’t sign anything!’” she said. She left after security approached.

When she walked out of the building without him, she said his wife broke down sobbing.

Their daughter tried to console her, telling her, “Mommy, don’t cry. Everything will be OK when daddy comes.”

Bellisle reported from Seattle, Watson reported from San Diego and Santana reported from Washington.

ICE arrests of Afghans are on the rise in the wake of National Guard attack, immigration lawyers say
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Germany drops promise to resettle hundreds of Afghans

The 640 people in Pakistan awaiting resettlement – many of whom worked for the German military during the US invasion and occupation of Afghanistan – will no longer be taken in, as Merz’s government axes two programmes introduced by its centre-left-led predecessor.

Merz‪ has taken a harder line on migration to fend off a stiff challenge from the far right.

The people awaiting evacuation would receive notice from Germany in the coming days “that there is no longer any political interest in their being admitted”, an interior ministry spokesperson said.

Rights groups called the reversal a betrayal that defied several court rulings. They warned that the Afghans risked “persecution, abuse and death” if they were returned.

Karl Kopp, the head of the German NGO Pro Asyl, criticised the government’s decision as “ice cold”. He added: “The previous government promised to take these people in for one reason only: they had fought for women’s rights, human rights and freedom in Afghanistan.”

The people affected were now in acute danger and at risk of falling into the hands of the Islamist Taliban regime, he said. “For the new government, this shameful treatment of people in mortal danger is a declaration of moral bankruptcy.”

After the Taliban’s return to power four years ago, Germany’s then centre-left-led government launched programmes offering refuge to “especially endangered people” including local staff who had worked for the German military or government ministries, as well as rights activists and journalists.

Until April 2025, before Merz took office in May, about 4,000 local staff and 15,000 of their family members had been resettled in Germany, according to official data.

Since then, a few hundred Afghans have been evacuated from Pakistan but the current government has largely moved to phase out that policy, offering money to those who renounce their right to be resettled. The interior ministry said last month only 62 people had taken up the offer.

Up to 1,800 Afghans approved for relocation to Germany have been stranded in Pakistan for months, NGOs say.

The interior minister, Alexander Dobrindt, has spearheaded many of the government’s toughest measures to block new arrivals.

He has concluded that only Afghanswith a “legally binding” promise should remain eligible for resettlement. The interior ministry said this would cover only 90 of the 220 local staff still awaiting evacuation.

A former local police training officer and father of four told the daily Frankfurter Rundschau that he had waited two years to enter Germany and was shocked by the decision. “In a single moment, all my hopes and dreams of a normal life were shattered,” he was quoted as saying.

The military affairs reporter Thomas Wiegold said the about-face could have long-term consequences for any future missions abroad. “German soldiers can only fervently hope that they will never, ever, ever again be dependent on local support anywhere,” he wrote on Bluesky.

More than 250 NGOs issued an open letter this week criticising the government for failing to honour Berlin’s promises to Afghans left in limbo, 70% of whom, they noted, are women and children.

Groups including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and religious organisations called on the government to evacuate all 1,800 people before the end of the year – the deadline announced by the Pakistani government for them to leave.

Last year, Germany resumed deportations to Taliban-ruled Afghanistan, with the then chancellor, Olaf Scholz, promising a more aggressive approach to removals of those with a criminal record.

Several such flights have taken place under the current government, even as the foreign ministry warns of widespread human rights violations in Afghanistan, including “torture, extrajudicial killings, corporal punishment and public executions”.

Germany drops promise to resettle hundreds of Afghans
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Iran Warns UN That Lack of Inclusive Government Could Ignite New Conflict in Afghanistan

Khaama Press

Iran told the UN Security Council that Afghanistan risks renewed instability and conflict unless a genuinely inclusive government is formed to bridge deepening political divisions.

Iran has warned that rising tensions in Afghanistan are linked to the absence of an inclusive government, cautioning that renewed conflict could emerge if political gaps remain unresolved. Amir Saeid Iravani, Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations, issued the warning during a UN Security Council session on Wednesday.

Reports indicated that Iran has recently mobilised several opposition groups and is expected to increase pressure on Kabul to engage in dialogue with these factions. Tehran is also preparing to host a regional meeting aimed at addressing the escalating tensions between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Iravani noted that Afghanistan’s instability directly affects Iran due to their long shared border and the presence of millions of Afghan migrants living inside the country. According to Iravani, these factors make developments in Afghanistan an immediate security and humanitarian concern for Tehran.

Iravani described practical and meaningful engagement with Afghanistan’s current rulers as a strategic necessity rather than a policy choice. He argued that constructive interaction is essential for managing risks, reducing long-term costs, and preventing future crises.

Despite this, the Iranian envoy expressed strong concern over the deteriorating human rights situation, particularly the continued limitations on women and girls. He said the restrictions on education, employment, and public participation contradict Islamic teachings and basic human dignity.

Calling for urgent action, Iravani urged the authorities in Kabul to lift these restrictions immediately. He stressed that political flexibility is needed to open the path toward broader participation.

He concluded that forming an inclusive and representative government is critical for achieving lasting peace, preventing renewed conflict, avoiding large refugee flows, ensuring security, improving Afghanistan’s economic conditions, and upholding human rights, especially those of women and girls.

Iran Warns UN That Lack of Inclusive Government Could Ignite New Conflict in Afghanistan
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1.7 Million Children at Risk of Death in Afghanistan: Tom Fletcher

Khaama Press

 

UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher warns that 1.7 million children in Afghanistan face deadly malnutrition amid severe winter conditions, funding shortfalls, and stalled aid deliveries.

The UN has warned of a growing humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan, where 1.7 million children are at risk of death due to severe malnutrition. Tom Fletcher, UN Deputy Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, described the situation as “shocking” during a Security Council briefing on Wednesday, December 10.

Fletcher said food insecurity has worsened this winter, with many life-saving food distributions suspended. He added that 1.1 million children have been denied access to vital aid, leaving them extremely vulnerable.

He reported that 303 nutrition service centres have been forced to close due to funding shortfalls, further limiting access to emergency care for malnourished children. Fletcher emphasized that lifting restrictions on women and girls is critical to maintaining aid operations.

The UN official also condemned Taliban prohibitions on women working in UN offices, calling them “unacceptable” and warning that the restrictions disrupt essential humanitarian services. He urged the international community to provide additional funding to sustain aid programmes.

According to recent reports by the World Food Programme (WFP) and the World Health Organization (WHO), Afghanistan remains one of the world’s most food-insecure countries, with millions facing acute malnutrition and inadequate access to healthcare.

Humanitarian agencies say that without urgent international support, the coming months could see a significant increase in child mortality and widespread suffering among vulnerable populations.

Security Council members highlighted the need for coordinated action to ensure that aid reaches those most in need, stressing that the protection of women workers and access for humanitarian staff are essential for delivering life-saving assistance.

1.7 Million Children at Risk of Death in Afghanistan: Tom Fletcher
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Moscow Warns of Deepening Rift Between Islamabad and Kabul

Khaama Press

 

Russia has expressed serious concern over escalating tensions between Islamabad and Kabul, urging both sides to resolve differences diplomatically to prevent further regional instability and conflict.

Russia has voiced deep concern over rising tensions between Pakistan and the Taliban, urging both sides to settle their differences through diplomatic means. Russian Ambassador to Pakistan Albert Khorev said Moscow is monitoring the situation closely and hopes it does not escalate further.

In a press briefing at the Russian Embassy in Islamabad, Khorev said Russia is ready to strengthen counterterrorism cooperation with both Islamabad and Kabul. He emphasized that terrorism is a shared threat affecting Afghanistan, Pakistan, Russia, and the wider region, making coordinated action essential.

The ambassador pointed to the deadly border clashes of October 2025, the worst since the Taliban returned to power, as a key moment that heightened regional alarm. He stressed that preventing another confrontation is in the interest of all neighboring states.

Khorev also reiterated Moscow’s willingness to mediate between the Taliban and Pakistan, noting that Russia supports all efforts aimed at stabilizing South Asia. He highlighted Iran’s recent diplomatic push, including its initiative to convene a regional summit to address the deteriorating Pakistan-Taliban relationship.

Regional observers say the repeated collapse of talks has deepened concerns among key players such as Russia, Iran, Qatar, and Turkey, all of whom fear that further deterioration could fuel greater instability across South Asia. Their involvement reflects the urgency of preventing another round of border violence.

With both Islamabad and Kabul holding firm to uncompromising positions, diplomats warn that renewed clashes remain a real possibility. Russia’s latest call for dialogue underscores growing fears that unresolved tensions between Pakistan and the Taliban could spill over, threatening regional security.

Moscow Warns of Deepening Rift Between Islamabad and Kabul
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Center for Freedom of Expression: Journalists’ Situation in Afghanistan Remains Alarming

The Freedom of Expression Center warns that journalists in Afghanistan face increasing threats, censorship, and harassment, putting press freedom and independent reporting at serious risk.

On Human Rights Day, the Center for Freedom of Expression warned that journalists and media defenders in Afghanistan face worsening repression and restricted civil liberties.

The report highlighted arbitrary arrests, threats, and detention of journalists, with many held without trial, legal support, or family contact under current administration.

Self-censorship, organized media censorship, and the silencing of independent outlets are preventing citizens from accessing information and undermining freedom of expression.

Women journalists are disproportionately affected, barred from work, education, and social participation, reflecting systematic discrimination within Afghanistan’s media and public spheres.

Afghan journalists in neighboring countries, particularly Pakistan, face insecurity, homelessness, and limited protection, worsened by rising tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The report noted that at least 15 TV networks were shut down over the past year, severely weakening visual media and public information access.

The Center called on the international community to provide protection and support for Afghanistan journalists, emphasizing that continued repression threatens democracy, transparency, and human rights in Afghanistan.

Center for Freedom of Expression: Journalists’ Situation in Afghanistan Remains Alarming
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Herat Elders Call on Politicians to Return, Resolve Disputes Peacefully

Some participants also called on the Islamic Emirate to facilitate the return and dialogue of political groups.

Dozens of tribal elders and religious scholars gathered in Herat, calling on Afghan politicians and opponents of the Islamic Emirate to return to the country and resolve their differences through dialogue.

They stated that Afghanistan is in a critical situation and that it is the responsibility of all parties to address the country’s challenges through peaceful means.

Khalil Ahmad Shahidzada, a tribal elder, said: “To ensure security and prevent the country from slipping back into conflict, war, or unrest that could pave the way for foreign interference, Afghans must resolve their problems through dialogue and mutual understanding.”

Abdul Hadi Wasiqi, a religious scholar, added: “Let us come together as Muslims, Afghans, and compatriots, open our arms with kindness, embrace one another as brothers, and with determination, engage in dialogue to resolve the problems of this nation.”

Some participants also called on the Islamic Emirate to facilitate the return and dialogue of political groups.

They emphasized that all challenges must be resolved through dialogue and peaceful approaches.

Sayed Ahmad Qatali, a religious scholar, said: “It is best to use this final opportunity, to come and live in harmony with the Islamic Emirate and rescue Afghanistan from the suffering and displacement that our people are enduring beyond the borders.”

Meanwhile, these elders and scholars condemned Pakistan’s recent attacks on Afghan territory.

They stated that Pakistan’s violation of Afghanistan’s sovereignty is against international law and urged the Islamic Emirate to prevent further military aggression by Pakistan.

Ghulam Habib Hashimi, a tribal elder, said: “This situation is unacceptable to the Afghan people. We call on the international community, especially the United Nations, to stop Pakistan’s hostile attacks.”

This comes as these tribal elders and religious scholars call for the return of former politicians and officials while, over the past four years, hundreds of former officials have already returned to the country following invitations from the Commission for Contact with Afghan Personalities.

Herat Elders Call on Politicians to Return, Resolve Disputes Peacefully
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Islamic Emirate Welcomes Positive Signals from UN Security Council Session

She said that with the Security Council’s support, the UN can continue building and strengthening engagement with the Islamic Emirate.

The United Nations Security Council held a session late last night to discuss Afghanistan.

In the meeting, the acting head of the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) called on member states to help address the root causes of Afghanistan’s humanitarian, economic, and human rights crises.

She said that with the Security Council’s support, the UN can continue building and strengthening engagement with the Islamic Emirate.

Georgette Gagnon, acting head of UNAMA, stated: “With the Council’s support, we can continue to build bridges of engagement and work towards our common vision of an Afghanistan at peace, reintegrated into the global community and where the human rights of all Afghans are realized and respected.”

Fu Cong, China’s permanent representative to the United Nations, said: “Maintaining engagement between the international community and Afghanistan’s current government is more essential than ever, and dialogue with the Islamic Emirate must be strengthened to help improve the situation.”

Representatives from India and Russia said that punitive policies against the Islamic Emirate over the past four and a half years have yielded no tangible benefits for the Afghan people and have only prolonged the current state of affairs.

India’s representative, Parvathaneni Harish, emphasized: “For years, India has been a strong advocate of peace and stability in Afghanistan. Coordinated regional and international cooperation on key issues concerning Afghanistan is paramount, as is strongly engaging relevant parties for promoting peace, stability and development in the country.”

Russia’s envoy, Vassily Nebenzia, said: “Russia has consistently stressed the need to craft a viable comprehensive approach on Afghanistan. This approach needs to be rooted in an objective analysis and a balanced assessment of the situation in the country. This is an imperative.”

Meanwhile, countries like the United States and the United Kingdom used the session to criticize restrictions imposed on women in Afghanistan.

Elise Stefanik, the U.S. representative, said: “People of Afghanistan continue to endure significant hardships including human rights abuses, poverty, unemployment, limited access to basic services, and unconscionable restrictions on women’s rights. The Taliban are responsible for these hardships and suffering because of the policy.”

The UK’s representative said: “Over the four years of the Taliban’s rule, repression has intensified. Over a hundred edicts have systematically eroded the rights of Afghan women and girls. Girls cannot attend school after the age of 12, and for more than three months, the Taliban has banned women from working at UN offices.”

The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan welcomed the positive engagement approach expressed by some countries during the session. Hamdullah Fitrat, deputy spokesperson for the Islamic Emirate, also criticized the stance of certain countries, emphasizing that negative positions will yield no results.

Fitrat said: “We appreciate that some countries have stressed positive engagement with Afghanistan this is a constructive step and the only path toward building trust. Afghanistan wants positive engagement with all countries. Those that continue to hold unrealistic positions should adopt more pragmatic approaches. Negative posturing in the past has brought no results.”

Representatives from China, Russia, and UNAMA also expressed concern over recent tensions between Kabul and Islamabad, urging the normalization of relations between the two countries.

Islamic Emirate Welcomes Positive Signals from UN Security Council Session
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Between Pakistan and Afghanistan, a Trade War With No End in Sight

One of Peshawar’s largest markets in western Pakistan once bustled with thousands of Afghan-owned shops and carts, selling everything from deep-fried khajoor pastries to kitchen items and cricket gear.

But business has been cut by half, according to business owners, and the market’s alleys have become so sparse that shoppers can walk freely along its stalls without elbowing through crowds. And aid shipments urgently needed in Afghanistan are piling up at Pakistani ports.

“Afghans are afraid of going outside,” said Hameed Ullah Ayaz, an Afghan owner of 12 bakeries in Peshawar.

Amid the deepest erosion of relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan in decades, the Pakistani government has cut off cross-border trade. It is aiming to punish the Taliban administration for failing to rein in affiliated militants who attack Pakistan and find refuge on the other side of the border.

The suspension of trade is hurting millions of farmers, traders and members of close-knit communities in Afghanistan and Pakistan as trucks full of coal, cement, pomegranates, cotton, medicines and other goods worth $2 billion in bilateral trade last year have not crossed in nearly two months.

Afghanistan has scrambled to shift trade routes. Yet Pakistan, with its market of 250 million consumers and the land access it offers to India, has been vital to a beleaguered Afghan economy, which has already been hit this year by aid cuts worth hundreds of millions of dollars, two deadly earthquakes and the forced return of more than 2.5 million Afghans from neighboring countries.

Near Peshawar and along the nearby road that runs through the border, hundreds of container-laden trucks and trailers have sat idle since Oct. 11. Some have been pushed off the road onto the dusty ground. Border guards have barred most crossings, except for Afghan nationals leaving Pakistan.

“When they stopped us here, it was still summer,” Abdul Wakeel, an Afghan driver, said on a recent afternoon as he sipped tea on a threadbare carpet at the Torkham border crossing between Pakistan and Afghanistan. “Now winter is right upon us.”

Pakistan accuses the Taliban government in Afghanistan of supporting a resurgent insurgency that has killed hundreds of Pakistani security forces in recent years and that struck its capital last month. The Taliban administration has denied supporting Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, also known as Pakistani Taliban or T.T.P., and claims that the violence faced by Pakistan is its own problem.

Pakistan has responded by expelling more than a million Afghans this year and carrying out airstrikes on Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul, and in Kandahar, where the Taliban’s leader lives. Dozens of soldiers from both armies were killed in cross-border clashes this fall.

A cease-fire declared in October hangs by a thread. Mediation efforts by Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia have yielded no result. And the trade war seems to have no end in sight as both governments have geared up for more hostilities.

Pakistan and Afghanistan have repeatedly closed their border since the Taliban reclaimed power in 2021. But Shahid Hussain, a Pakistani representative of traders with more than two decades of experience with Afghanistan, said he had never witnessed such prolonged volatility.

“The Taliban are indicating that things aren’t going to get better anytime soon with Pakistan, and the Pakistani military won’t let up on this,” said Azeema Cheema, the founding director of Verso Consulting, an Islamabad-based research firm. “There doesn’t seem to be any path.”

Trade representatives and economic analysts say both sides are shooting themselves in the foot with a trade war.

Until this fall, Afghanistan used to rely on Pakistan for more than 40 percent of its exports. Pakistan-imported cement fueled a construction boom in Kabul and other cities, while medicine coming from its larger neighbor filled its pharmacy shelves.

Pakistan is facing a rising poverty rate of 25 percent, its highest in nearly a decade.

“The two are hypocrites,” said Syed Naqeeb Badshah, the president of a lobbying group representing Afghan traders in Pakistan.

Nowhere has the effect of the trade suspension been felt harder than in border areas and places like Peshawar, which was a major hub on the old Silk Road and is now a bustling city of two million people with a sizable Afghan population, about 30 miles from Afghanistan.

Afghan shop and cart owners running most of the 7,000 businesses in the Afghan Board Market have reported considerable losses, Mr. Badshah said. Affluent Afghan traders have been withdrawing funds from Pakistani banks out of fear of Pakistan’s expulsion drive. Pakistani business partners have grown wary of doing business with them as they also fear that Afghans might be forced to leave.

“We’re caught in between the politics of two countries,” Mr. Badshah said from his office overlooking the market.

On the other side of the border, Afghan farmers have lost their main business destination. In the southeastern province of Kandahar, they were about to export months of harvest, including Afghanistan’s famed pomegranates.

Abdullah Khan, a farmer, said that he was sending his fruits at a discounted price to Afghan cities instead, and that he did not know how he would pay back the $15,000 he borrowed to rent three orchards this year.

The Taliban administration has been seeking new business routes: India announced last month that it would launch air cargo services with Afghanistan “very soon,” and Afghanistan’s and Iran’s chamber of commerces signed a trade agreement last month to boost bilateral exchanges.

The World Bank said in a recent report that Afghan exports had increased by 13 percent from September to October as Afghan traders had managed to redirect shipments through Iran and Central Asia.

Mr. Ayaz, the Afghan businessman, who employs more than 100 Pakistani workers in his 12 bakeries in Peshawar, said a diplomat from the Afghan Consulate had urged him to move to Afghanistan during a recent impromptu visit to his factory. He would receive free land and housing in Afghanistan, the consulate employee told him.

“The guys wouldn’t be able to pay for half of it,” Mr. Ayaz, 41, said about the Taliban administration and the assets he had accumulated in 20 years of business in Pakistan.

Like many Afghans, Mr. Ayaz, who was born in Pakistan and has spent his life there, faces deportation as the Pakistani authorities have stopped renewing visas and urged all Afghans to move out.

“If I’m deported, I will go back with dignity,” Mr. Ayaz said as two of his sons and his Pakistani associate listened to him in silence.

Wasim Sajjad contributed reporting from Peshawar, and Taimoor Shah from Kandahar, Afghanistan.

Elian Peltier is an international correspondent for The Times, covering Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Between Pakistan and Afghanistan, a Trade War With No End in Sight
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Saudi Delegation to Visit Afghanistan, Pakistan for Further Talks

After the failure of previous talks between Afghanistan and Pakistan in Istanbul, regional efforts to ease tensions between the two sides have intensified.

BBC, citing its sources, has reported that during recent negotiations between Afghanistan and Pakistan in Riyadh, both sides agreed to uphold a ceasefire.

According to the report, although no formal agreement was reached during the talks, a delegation from Saudi Arabia is expected to visit Afghanistan and Pakistan for further consultations.

Yousuf Amin Zazai, a political analyst, stated: “Our problem with Pakistan is clear. Pakistan must stop its hostility toward the Afghan people. That’s the foundation of the discussion. Is Pakistan ready for that? If so, we are ready to negotiate in any country and on any issue.”

While it is not yet clear when the Saudi delegation will visit Afghanistan and Pakistan, several sources speaking to the BBC on condition of anonymity said that during the recent talks in Riyadh, Afghan and Pakistani delegations committed to continuing the dialogue.

Aziz Maarij, another political analyst, remarked: “Pakistan does not want peace, because it’s a project. They aim to delay the process, bring delegations back and forth, while Pakistan pursues its own goals during this time.”

After the failure of previous talks between Afghanistan and Pakistan in Istanbul, regional efforts to ease tensions between the two sides have intensified.

Just a day earlier, Iran’s Foreign Ministry also announced its readiness to assist in reducing tensions between Kabul and Islamabad.

Saudi Delegation to Visit Afghanistan, Pakistan for Further Talks
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