For most of Abdul Manan’s life, the border dividing Afghanistan and Pakistan was little more than a line on a map.
Like generations of men before him, Mr. Manan, 55, commuted every day from his mud-brick home on the Pakistan side to the wheat field his family had cultivated for decades in Afghanistan.
His four sons crossed the border with him, transporting electronics and groceries from markets on one side to homes on the other.
It was a journey shared by tens of thousands of residents in the Pakistani town of Chaman, the site of the last official border crossing where people could pass through using only their national identity card from Pakistan.
For the first time since the border was drawn over a century ago, the Pakistani authorities are requiring residents to show a passport and visa before crossing — paperwork that virtually none of them have, they say.
Persons:
Abdul Manan’s, Manan
Locations:
Afghanistan, Pakistan, Chaman