Pakistan has extended by two months the deadline for repatriation of Afghan refugees, giving a temporary relief to them amid a spike in violence in Afghanistan.
About 3 million Afghans have been living in Pakistan for decades. Nearly half of them are unregistered and staying in the country illegally.
The decision to extend the deadline for their return was taken by federal cabinet yesterday.
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The validity of legal refugee status for many Afghan refugees expired on January 31. This threw into doubt the future of these refugees.
Pakistan has extended the validity of PoR for the refugees at least six times in the past.
The Pakistani government says the country's economy "has carried the burden of hosting Afghan refugees since long and in the present circumstances cannot sustain it further."
The 60-day extension came as Afghan Interior Minister Wais Ahmad Barmak and National Directorate of Security chief Mohamed Masoom Stanekzai visited Pakistan to discuss bilateral ties.
The security situation in Afghanistan, where US-led coalition forces and the Afghan army continue to battle the Afghan Taliban for control of areas of the country, has been deteriorating in recent weeks.
On Sunday, at least 103 people were killed in a suicide attack in the heart of the capital Kabul.
A day later, at least 11 soldiers were killed when gunmen attacked a military academy, also in Kabul.
Afghanistan and the US have blamed Pakistan for allegedly providing safe havens to elements of the Afghan Taliban and Haqqani Network. Pakistan denies the charge, alleging that it is Afghan forces that offer sanctuary to elements of the Pakistani Taliban.
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