Pakistan to deport National Geographic ‘Afghan Girl’

Judge orders deportation of Sharbat Gula for illegally obtaining Pakistan identity card

Inam Khan, owner of a book shop in Islamabad, Pakistan, with the magazine cover featuring Sharbat Gula. Photograph: BK Bangash/AP Photo
Inam Khan, owner of a book shop in Islamabad, Pakistan, with the magazine cover featuring Sharbat Gula. Photograph: BK Bangash/AP Photo

A Pakistani judge on Friday ordered the deportation of Sharbat Gula, the green-eyed "Afghan Girl" whose 1985 photo in National Geographic became a symbol of her country's wars, after finding her guilty of illegally obtaining a Pakistani identity card.

Gula, now in her 40s, was also sentenced to 15 days in jail and fined 100,000 rupees (€860).

She had been living in Pakistan’s northwestern city of Peshawar for years with her husband and children. Her family has said her husband died a few years ago.

Sharbat Gula (covered), known as the ‘Afghan Girl’ who appeared on the cover of a 1985 edition of National Geographic magazine, leaves the court in Peshawar.  Photograph: A Majeeda Majeed/AFP/Getty Images
Sharbat Gula (covered), known as the ‘Afghan Girl’ who appeared on the cover of a 1985 edition of National Geographic magazine, leaves the court in Peshawar. Photograph: A Majeeda Majeed/AFP/Getty Images

It was not immediately clear when Gula would be freed or deported, as she has already spent 10 days in jail, said an official at the Afghan consulate in Peshawar.

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"She may spend five or four more days in Pakistan as a prisoner but we had made a special request to the Pakistani authorities to allow her to return to Afghanistan either today, Friday, or Saturday," he said on condition of anonymity.

Hospital

Judge Farah Jamshed, of an anti-corruption and immigration court in Peshawar, convicted Gula under the Foreign Act, according to a copy of the ruling.

She has been in custody since her arrest on Wednesday last week on accusations she was using a forged Pakistani identity card.

She had been recently shifted to a hospital with a fever and high blood pressure, said Dr Ghulam Subhani, of the city's Lady Reading Hospital, where her family have visited her. However, she did appear in court on Friday for the verdict.

Gula was for years the face of Afghanistan's suffering, after National Geographic published her image as a young refugee; her defiant, pained eyes staring out from an unsmiling face, framed by a shawl over her head.

Her legal case comes amid Pakistani pressure to send home 2.5 million Afghan refugees, even though Afghanistan faces a bloody Taliban insurgency and would struggle to look after them.

– Reuters