Pakistan repatriates 525 Afghan families from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa camps
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Pakistan has repatriated 525 Afghan families from three refugee camps in Bannu district, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, completing the full evacuation of those sites as part of an accelerating deportation drive, local media reported on Tuesday, 14 July 2026. The families were moved to Afghanistan through the Torkham border crossing, according to district officials.
Key Developments
Additional Deputy Commissioner (ADC) Umar Khittab Khan confirmed that the repatriation was carried out under directives from the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government. The three camps — Bizan Khel, Ghoriwala, and Mamand Khel — have now been completely vacated. Afghan families who wished to return voluntarily were accommodated at temporary transit centres established by the district administration before being transported to the Torkham crossing.
Focus Shifts to Afghans in Private Residences
With the camps cleared, authorities have now turned their attention to Afghan nationals living in rented houses and private residences across Bannu and surrounding areas. According to the ADC, records of such individuals are being shared with their respective police stations, and efforts are under way to expedite their repatriation as well.
The Legal Backdrop: Pakistan's July 10 Arrest Order
The camp clearances follow a sweeping order issued by Pakistan's Ministry of Interior on 28 June 2026, mandating the immediate arrest of any Afghan national found in the country without a valid visa from 10 July 2026. The directive was addressed to Chief Secretaries of all provinces and the Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT), and stems from decisions taken at a review meeting on the Illegal Foreigners' Repatriation Plan (IFRP) held on 1 June 2026.
The ministry's notification stated that all provincial governments, special area governments, and the ICT Administration had been directed to 'expedite the repatriation/deportation of Afghan nationals, including visa overstay cases, and to ensure strict implementation of the IFRP.' District administrations, police, and other law enforcement agencies have been instructed to enforce these orders.
A Deportation Drive Years in the Making
Pakistan's push to repatriate Afghan refugees is not new. A large-scale deportation drive was first launched in 2023, and was renewed in April 2025 when the government rescinded hundreds of thousands of residence permits for Afghans, warning of arrests for those who did not leave. The current phase represents a significant escalation — moving from permit cancellations to active camp clearances and an arrest mandate — and comes against the backdrop of strained Pakistan-Afghanistan relations and persistent domestic security concerns. Notably, this is one of the largest single-district repatriation operations reported since the drive began.
What Comes Next
With Bannu's camps now empty, the operational focus is expected to shift to urban centres where undocumented Afghans are concentrated. Humanitarian organisations have previously raised concerns about the pace and conditions of repatriation, particularly for families with no immediate support network inside Afghanistan. How the Afghan government and international agencies respond to the accelerated influx at the Torkham crossing will be closely watched in the coming weeks.