The myriad immigration malpractices that have resulted in this
deportation primarily include entering countries illegally or by
producing fake documents.
The second claim to fame of Pakistanis worldwide is migrating to
other countries with counterfeit IDs; harassing non-Muslims for
following different faiths and levying bogus blasphemy charges on them
remains their first claim to fame.
You will find Pakistani migrants everywhere, be it a First-World
Western country, the gold-and-oil-laden Middle East, or any other
Third-World developing nation. With an ever-plummeting economy and
unstable governments in their Islamic Republic, there is hardly any part
of the world that Pakistanis have not tried to flee to seek better
living conditions. In their desperate search for a better life, they
often end up in foreign lands with forged IDs, and are deported.
Interestingly, 72% of the total deportations have been from friendly
Islamic nations, including Oman, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Iran, Qatar,
Bahrain and the UAE; so reports News International.
As records establish, Saudi Arabia, which has been deporting an
average of 147 Pakistanis per day, has been the champion of sending
Pakistanis home. A Times of India report claims
that Saudi Arabia deported 61,403 Pakistanis were deported in 2015,
57,704 in 2016, 93,736 in 2017, 50,944 in 2018, 38,470 in 2019 and
19,333 in 2021. Other Islamic countries such as Turkey, Bahrain, and
Oman have also deported thousands of Pakistanis every year, who were
living in those countries without documents.
Among the First-World countries in the West, the United Kingdom has
always been the favorite among Pakistanis. Their UK-born generations
have now attained key administrative positions, impacting the safety of
citizens and the security of British cities, or lack thereof. London
Mayor Sadiq Aman Khan, who considers Islamic terrorism a “part and
parcel of living in a big city,” was born to a working-class Muslim
family that had migrated from India to Pakistan during the 1947
partition, and then migrated to the United Kingdom.
The generous UK has expelled over 5000 Pakistanis since 2015 on the
grounds of lack of proper documents. The United States of America
deported 166 illegal Pakistanis in 2015 and 212 in 2016, when former
President Barack Obama was in the Oval office. In the subsequent years,
218, 293, 372 and 282 undocumented Pakistanis were sent packing from the
ultimate land of opportunity.
Russia has handed over some 564 illegal Pakistanis to Pakistan’s
border authorities since 2015, while South Africa expatriated more than
3800 of them. Hundreds of Pakistanis with fake documents or without
proper paperwork have been expelled from South Korea, Australia, Hong
Kong, and France as well.
New reports highlight that while some Pakistanis have a history of
entering other countries by presenting dubious documents with the help
of their agents and human traffickers, others intentionally misplace
their papers in order to prolong their stay in the foreign country.
The concern is not limited to Pakistanis entering foreign nations
illegally; the suspicious nature of their activities during their time
in these countries poses a threat to the lives and property of the
civilians of these countries also. Some of them have committed deadly
crimes in the host countries, and they have done so with an absolute
absence of remorse.
“We have not committed that big a crime,”
asserted Adil Khan. 50-something Adil Khan and his accomplice Qari
Abdul Rauf had been convicted of involvement in a jihadist grooming gang
that raped close to 50 girls in Rochdale, United Kingdom.
That thousands of British schoolgirls and British Sikh schoolgirls
have been targeted and sexually exploited by Pakistani-origin grooming
gangs for years is public knowledge. But British authorities have
continually ignored this grave threat to British women for the sake of
political correctness, allowing numerous young girls to be sexually
abused by these grooming gangs.
In another incident, 40-year-old Pakistani national Abid Ali Khan has
been indicted for allegedly working with his Pakistan-based smuggling
network to facilitate the travel of undocumented people from Afghanistan
and Pakistan to the United States between January 2015 and December
2020.
Homeland Security investigations have revealed that the human
trafficking organization, based in Pakistan’s Khyber province, operated
through the Middle East and Southwest Asia and exploited the systemic
vulnerabilities to illegally transport foreign nationals into the US and
other countries.