What's new

Pakistani beggars seen as spying for ISI

pakistani342

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jan 20, 2013
Messages
3,485
Reaction score
6
Country
United States
Location
United States
Ahhh, the evil Pakistanis are up to no good again, and this time they are beggars - I guess this could qualify as humor in the foreign policy section - so do forgive me for posting.

I guess Afghan refugees good Pakistani Beggars bad.

Original link here.

.....


KABUL: There are concerns among some circles that foreign beggars, particularly Pakistanis, may be involved in working for their spy services and moral corruption.

The number of foreign tramps, many of them Pakistanis, has risen in the country over the past few year. Hardly able to converse either in Pashto or Dari, Afghanistan's main languages, many of them speak Urdu.

“We are tired of Pakistani hobos who seek alms from shoppers. At times, our clients, bothered by them, walk out,” a shopkeeper in the Kota Sangi locality of Kabul, Mohammad Ali, told Pajhwok Afghan News.

There is no guarantee of these drifters not spying for foreign countries, according to resident Mohammad Rafi, who asked the government to force them from the capital city.
Frequently troubled by alms-seekers, he complained they could not conveniently purchase daily-use items for families.

The presence of beggars on capital roads, streets and markets adds to crowding in the city, believes taxi driver Abdul Qadeer. “Different kinds of people sits on main roads, asking for alms and causing blockades.”

Pakistani vagabonds have been growing in numbers in southern Kandahar province. Eighty percent of them were women and girls who occasionally committed immoral acts, claimed a resident from Kandahar, Haji Abdul Bari.

Apprehensive they might be working for foreign intelligence services, he urged the government to take immediate measures to expel them from the province.

The governor's spokesman, Javed Faisal, said a committee including intelligence, police, Afghan Red Crescent Society and Department of Labour officials to drive beggars from Kandahar City.

There were widespread worries the beggars collected information and passed it on to Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), said a shopkeeper from Kunduz, Yaqub Ali.

A shopkeeper in restive Helmand province, Noor Agha, also thought beggars might have hand in explosions and other security incidents.

But a beggar in Kabul said they had come from Pakistan's southwestern Balochistan province because of unemployment. His sole objective was to eke out a livelihood, he explained.

Sher Nawaz has come to Kunduz along with his spouse and three children from the Punjab province of Pakistan to earn a living. One afghani was equal to two rupees, he argued, saying he earned 500-800afs a day.

Ali Iftikhari, the spokesman for the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs, said they had seized dozens of Pakistan beggars in Kabul and handed them over to the Pakistani embassy.

The authorities had got an undertaking from them not to come back to Afghanistan, but their return was not being tracked, he said.

Acting interior minister Gen. Mujtaba Patang said they would discuss the issue with the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs. They would jointly find a lasting solution to the problem, he promised.

On beggars working for foreign intelligence networks, Kabul Crime Branch chief, Brig. Gen. Mohammad Zahir, said they had no evidence in this regard. (PAN)
 
Foriegn beggars in afghanistan........ :rofl:


AFGHANISTAN TIMES HOOKED ON:

2u6cqv6.jpg
 
While Pakistan is feeding more than 4 million afghans here for the last three and a half decades, they see Pakistani beggars in Kabul???

By the way, only Pakistani Pushtuns go to Afghanistan, and I have never seen a Pathan beggar in my life, never ever. a Pakistan pathan would starve to death rather than beg.
 
Afghanistani have taken shelter in Pakistan because of Taliban. Why these Pakistani ppl are living in Afghanistan??

Most likely refugees coming back home and they are calling them Pakistani.



So you are saying Afghanistani can't distinguish between Pakistani and Afghani?
 
Afghanistani have taken shelter in Pakistan because of Taliban. Why these Pakistani ppl are living in Afghanistan??

So you are saying Afghanistani can't distinguish between Pakistani and Afghani?

You didn't get the point that Mamba is making, I'll let you figure it out for yourself.
 
Afghanistani have taken shelter in Pakistan because of Taliban. Why these Pakistani ppl are living in Afghanistan??


So you are saying Afghanistani can't distinguish between Pakistani and Afghani?

Geelam Jam !! Problem ?
 
Beggars, tramps, hobos, drifters, alms-seekers, vagabonds... looks like the writer of this article went through all the synonyms in the thesaurus.
 
So non-pashto speaking people migrated all the way to the capital of Afghanistan to beg??

I dont even know what the nearest Urdu speaking community to the Afghan border is, but if I had to guess it is probably something like 100km which is a ridiculous length to go just to beg. I think its more likely that they are part of the many 2nd Gen Afghan refugees that were recently deported, why hasn't the Kabul government bothered to id them?
 
Maybe they are 'Urdu speaking Afghan hobos' going back to their land of gold and jewls?
Yes

Ahhh, the evil Pakistanis are up to no good again, and this time they are beggars - I guess this could qualify as humor in the foreign policy section - so do forgive me for posting.

I guess Afghan refugees good Pakistani Beggars bad.

Original link here.

.....


KABUL: There are concerns among some circles that foreign beggars, particularly Pakistanis, may be involved in working for their spy services and moral corruption.

The number of foreign tramps, many of them Pakistanis, has risen in the country over the past few year. Hardly able to converse either in Pashto or Dari, Afghanistan's main languages, many of them speak Urdu.

“We are tired of Pakistani hobos who seek alms from shoppers. At times, our clients, bothered by them, walk out,” a shopkeeper in the Kota Sangi locality of Kabul, Mohammad Ali, told Pajhwok Afghan News.

There is no guarantee of these drifters not spying for foreign countries, according to resident Mohammad Rafi, who asked the government to force them from the capital city.
Frequently troubled by alms-seekers, he complained they could not conveniently purchase daily-use items for families.

The presence of beggars on capital roads, streets and markets adds to crowding in the city, believes taxi driver Abdul Qadeer. “Different kinds of people sits on main roads, asking for alms and causing blockades.”

Pakistani vagabonds have been growing in numbers in southern Kandahar province. Eighty percent of them were women and girls who occasionally committed immoral acts, claimed a resident from Kandahar, Haji Abdul Bari.

Apprehensive they might be working for foreign intelligence services, he urged the government to take immediate measures to expel them from the province.

The governor's spokesman, Javed Faisal, said a committee including intelligence, police, Afghan Red Crescent Society and Department of Labour officials to drive beggars from Kandahar City.

There were widespread worries the beggars collected information and passed it on to Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), said a shopkeeper from Kunduz, Yaqub Ali.

A shopkeeper in restive Helmand province, Noor Agha, also thought beggars might have hand in explosions and other security incidents.

But a beggar in Kabul said they had come from Pakistan's southwestern Balochistan province because of unemployment. His sole objective was to eke out a livelihood, he explained.

Sher Nawaz has come to Kunduz along with his spouse and three children from the Punjab province of Pakistan to earn a living. One afghani was equal to two rupees, he argued, saying he earned 500-800afs a day.

Ali Iftikhari, the spokesman for the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs, said they had seized dozens of Pakistan beggars in Kabul and handed them over to the Pakistani embassy.

The authorities had got an undertaking from them not to come back to Afghanistan, but their return was not being tracked, he said.

Acting interior minister Gen. Mujtaba Patang said they would discuss the issue with the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs. They would jointly find a lasting solution to the problem, he promised.

On beggars working for foreign intelligence networks, Kabul Crime Branch chief, Brig. Gen. Mohammad Zahir, said they had no evidence in this regard. (PAN)
They are most likely Afghans born and bred in Pakistan who have returned to their country of origin and since they are "tainted" the born and bred Afghan does not accept them.
 

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom