Senate warned of halted visas, UAE says nearly 500 visas for Pakistanis processed daily

UAE ambassador says measures such as online applications, new visa centre to speed up travel for Pakistani nationals

People walk across a bridge in the Emirate of Dubai. Photo: File

The United Arab Emirates is processing nearly 500 visas daily for Pakistani nationals under new facilitation reforms, even as Pakistan’s interior ministry warned the Senate that the Emirates had stopped issuing visas, except for diplomatic and blue-passport holders.

Additional Interior Secretary Salman Chaudhry highlighted growing concerns over passport misuse, human trafficking, and the vulnerabilities facing overseas Pakistanis. The briefing, chaired by Senator Samina Mumtaz Zehri, warned that Pakistan had narrowly avoided a complete international ban on its passports - a step officials said would have been “extremely difficult” to reverse.

Officials informed the committee that 21,647 Pakistanis are currently imprisoned across 61 countries, mostly for minor offences such as overstaying visas, identity fraud, and bank-related violations. The Foreign Office said Pakistani embassies hold data for 90 percent of these detainees, and noted that several countries release minor offenders during Eid.

The ministry also highlighted that 93 per cent of Pakistan’s overseas workforce, nearly 800,000 people, is employed in Gulf states, underscoring the economic stakes tied to regional labour mobility.

A significant portion of the briefing focused on human trafficking networks operating from multiple districts in Punjab, which reportedly charge young people between Rs4.3 million and Rs5 million to send them abroad through illegal and dangerous routes.

Senator Zehri expressed serious concern over the surge in trafficking cases and criticised the near absence of awareness campaigns at airports and in major cities.

Officials further disclosed that more than 500,000 Afghan nationals had lived abroad using Pakistani passports, with some involved in criminal activities while posing as Pakistanis. They said NADRA has now fully digitised citizen records to prevent further misuse.

The committee called for stronger enforcement, improved public awareness, and coordinated measures to address the layered risks facing Pakistan’s migrant workers and the integrity of its identity documents.

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