"The ongoing negative rhetoric, stigmatism, and labelling of the Afghan population in Pakistan and how this is adversely increasing their vulnerability, safety, and security in Pakistan is of concern," UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres' deputy spokesperson Farhan Haq told reporters yesterday.
Haq was responding to a question about criticism of the UN system for not calling the return of Afghan refugees from Pakistan refoulement.
He also stressed that Pakistan should uphold its obligations under international law.
"Returnees should be provided with detailed information on the situation in their place of origin to allow them to take into account their current situation in regards to security, governance, and livelihoods and to make a fully informed choice.
"And we believe that Pakistan must uphold their obligations under international laws, including the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants, which was signed in2016," he said.
The returnees include 365,000 registered refugees, making it the world's largest mass forced return of refugees in recent years.
They now face spiralling armed conflict, violence, destitution, and displacement in Afghanistan.
The 76-page report titled "Pakistan Coercion, UN Complicity: The Mass Forced Return of Afghan Refugees," documents Pakistan's abuses and is also critical of the role of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in promoting the exodus.
The UN and international donors should press Pakistan to end the abuses, protect the remaining 1.1 million Afghan refugees in Pakistan, and allow refugees among the other estimated 750,000 unregistered Afghans there to seek protection, Human Rights Watch said.
The group said Pakistan's coercion of hundreds of thousands of registered Afghan refugees into returning to Afghanistan violates the international legal prohibition against refoulement - not to forcibly return anyone to a place where they would face a real risk of persecution, torture or other ill-treatment, or a threat to life.
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