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Trucks build up at border as Afghans deportees wait to cross

By AFP
April 29, 2026
In this picture, trucks are seen parked along a road and a parking area near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in Torkham on September 11, 2023. — AFP
In this picture, trucks are seen parked along a road and a parking area near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in Torkham on September 11, 2023. — AFP

LANDI KOTAL: Hundreds of trucks loaded with beds, cabinets and even household firewood lined the road from Pakistan´s mostly closed main border gateway into Afghanistan on Tuesday as Afghans pushed out of Pakistan prepared to cross.

Fraught relations that spiralled into armed conflict between the neighbours led to the crucial Torkham trade gateway being mostly closed since October. Officials told AFP that it re-opened for Afghan returnees last month.

Many said as they waited to cross on Tuesday that they hoped differences could be resolved peacefully to end a conflict that has killed hundreds and hampered deep economic and cultural ties shared by communities on both sides.

“If fighting starts on the border, it will become difficult for us and we will go back, and then we will face more difficulties,” Fida, a 28-year-old Afghan national near the crossing, told AFP. Afghan families, including children, clutched documents at the mountainous border crossing and carried household essentials, such as thermoses and rice cookers, as they lined up for immigration checks. However, the pace of processing their trucks, normally used to transport commercial goods but now laden with the rest of their belongings, struggled to keep up. Around 1,000 of the brightly coloured, ornately decorated trucks queued up along the roadside, with drivers resting under their vehicles to shelter during the long wait.

A Pakistani official posted at the border told AFP on condition of anonymity that around 4,000-6,000 Afghan returnees had been crossing each day since March.

“During this period, only their trucks carrying their belongings are allowed to pass into Afghanistan, while the trade route remains fully closed,” he said.

Businesses and locals on both sides of the border have expressed alarm at mounting financial losses due to stalled exports. “It would be good if Pakistan and Afghanistan resolve the issue through talks with each other and pave the way for trade,” said Mattiullah, an Afghan living in Pakistan who was waiting to cross.