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Pakistan: Refugees Fear Return
to Afghanistan
By Ashfaq Yusufzai
March 27, 2008 - (IPS) The countdown has begun
for Afghan refugees to vacate the Jalozai camp, 35 km east of this
border city in Pakistan.
An estimated 88,000-registered refugees, many of whom have lived
here for close to three decades, have been told to leave. Pakistani
authorities said bulldozers will flatten the makeshift, mud-plastered
homes in Jalozai after Apr. 15, the deadline for voluntary repatriation.
Last July, the largest Afghan refugee camp, Kacha Garhi, was razed
to the ground after it was shut.
Those who choose not to go have the option of shifting to new refugee
camps that have been established in Dir and Chitral, North West
Frontier Province (NWFP), 150 km and 425 km respectively from Peshawar,
which will remain open up to 2009.
With the security situation worsening, and the failure of the Karzai
government to tackle joblessness, most refugees fear a return to
hopelessness in Afghanistan.
"We are better off here. I earn roughly 35 US dollars a day,
which is quite enough money," said Abdul Waheed, a fruit seller
at the camp who arrived in Jalozai 16 years ago. His three sons
and three daughters do not want to go back either. "Back home
there are no jobs, no schools, no business, no health facilities.
Everything there (in Afghanistan) is in shambles," he added.
Another refugee, Rasool Mohammad who has lived in Jalozai for 13
years is preparing to leave. "We have packed our belongings,"
he said. "My two sons have gone to Kabul to register at a camp
there, and locate a house for our 12-member family."
Commissioner Afghan Refugees (CAR), Nasir Azam, has ruled out any
further extensions. According to Haji Dost Mohammad, a camp elder,
refugee representatives had pleaded for a few more weeks in order
to enable thousands of children to complete the school year by end-April.
Ghazal Gul, a final year student of a school in Jalozai, was categorical
his family will not leave. "We cannot go. We will stay with
relatives if we are forced to leave. The situation in Afghanistan
isn’t worth living," she said.
A veiled Afghan woman in a sky-blue burqa, her baby in her arms,
waits in front of the camp of the United Nation High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) to register. She identifies herself as Raeesa
Bibi. Originally from Jalalabad, on the road from Kabul to Peshawar,
she does not want to return to her country. "My husband died
of cancer three years ago," the 39-year-old said. "I work
in the houses of local people who feed my three children and meet
other requirements."
In Afghanistan, she fears her children would starve to death, and
she would be reduced to begging for a living.
Pakistani authorities have begun cracking down. Some 250 shops owned
by Afghan refugees in Jalozai were demolished on Mar. 5.
Camp residents will be sent back in two phases. All those belonging
to eastern Nangarhar province and areas adjacent to the Pakistan
border will be repatriated followed by those from the northern parts
of Afghanistan.
The UNHCR claims 2.8 million Afghans have returned home from Pakistan
since 2002. An estimated 1.2 million Afghans may be living illegally
in the country, according to the police. Tahir Khan, a police officer,
told IPS: "Every day, some 50 illegal Afghans are arrested
and deported."
The decision to shut down Jalozai was taken at a jirga (tribal assembly)
called by CAR and 50 Afghan elders from the camp on Sep. 5, 2007.
The refugees agreed to voluntarily vacate the camp before it is
shut down on Apr. 30, 2008.
Maulvi Mohammad Qayyum, one of the participants at the jirga, told
IPS that they had pinned their hopes on the UNHCR and Afghan government
establishing camps for the returning refugees. But nothing has so
far happened.
Jalozai camp was set up in the early 1980s by the United Nations
as a temporary haven for Afghan refugees. Their country has been
in turmoil since the Cold War years of rivalry between the United
States and the Soviet Army. When the Soviet army rode into Kabul
in 1979 at the invitation of the then communist-regime, Washington
retaliated by arming and financing Afghan mujahiddin groups based
in Pakistan.
Millions of Afghans have crossed into Pakistan and Iran fleeing
successive years of war, famine and drought.
Since the Hamid Karzai government was installed in Afghanistan after
U.S.-led troops ousted the Taliban regime in end-2001, Pakistan
has been urging the refugees to return. Nine of the 24 refugee camps
in NWFP and FATA, the centrally administered tribal areas on the
Afghan border, have closed.
More than 2 million Afghans recently registered with the government
under a UNHCR programme that grants them temporary resident status
in Pakistan for three years.
The UNHCR has supervised the voluntary repatriation of Afghans but
the process has slowed down with the re-emergence of the Taliban
in southern Afghanistan triggering another wave of displacements.
Some 350,000 refugees were repatriated in 2007. Each was paid approximately
100 dollars -- a transport and reintegration grant.
The independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) has urged
the government not to violate refugees’ rights and international
norms on the protection of refugees. Pakistan is not a signatory
to the U.N.’s 1951 Refugee Convention.
From:http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=41754
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