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Words of support for UNHCR as Kite Runner author publishes new novel

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Words of support for UNHCR as Kite Runner author publishes new novel

Acclaimed author Khaled Hosseini has praised the UN refugee agency in his second novel, A Thousand Splendid Suns. His first novel, The Kite Runner, has had a powerful impact on raising awareness about Afghan refugees.
22 May 2007
Author and UNHCR Goodwill Envoy in the US, Khaled Hosseini (left), meets Darfur refugee Yacoub Hussein. Before arriving at a UNHCR refugee camp in Chad, Hussein and his family lived for two months under a tree.

WASHINGTON, D.C., United States, May 22 (UNHCR) - Khaled Hosseini, author of the internationally best-selling novel, The Kite Runner, published his second book Tuesday in which he describes his work as a Goodwill Envoy for UNHCR as one of the most rewarding and meaningful experiences of his life.

In the afterword to A Thousand Splendid Suns, Hosseini recalls his work for UNHCR since receiving the Humanitarian of the Year Award at the 2006 World Refugee Day commemorations in Washington, DC. "Over the past year," he writes, "I have had the privilege of working as a US envoy for UNHCR ... one of the world's foremost humanitarian agencies."

In presenting Hosseini with the award, UNHCR sought to recognize the powerful impact his first novel has had on raising awareness of Afghan refugees. In A Thousand Splendid Suns, Hosseini chronicles the lives of two women over three decades of turmoil in Afghanistan. "Today, more than 2 million Afghan refugees remain in Pakistan," he writes in the afterword.

Assisting Afghan refugees remains one of UNHCR's major programmes. Since the fall of the Taliban in 2001, the UN refugee agency has assisted more than 4 million Afghans to return home. It continues to provide protection to the 3 million Afghan refugees who remain in Pakistan and Iran. Hosseini's own family left Afghanistan in 1976 and sough asylum four years later in the United States.

Earlier this year, Hosseini visited UNHCR camps in eastern Chad where some 240,000 refugees from Sudan's Darfur region are sheltered. For the author, the trip was the result of his desire to see first-hand one of UNHCR's most complex operations, He also wanted to use his experiences to bring wider attention to the Darfur crisis in the United States, where the non-profit organization USA for UNHCR is running a fund-raising campaign entitled Aid Darfur.

"In the camps, people told me stories of the janjaweed [Arab militia] attacking their villages and killing children, killing women, killing the elderly. Their homes are burnt and everything they own is taken from them.

"The visit certainly changed me in a very profound way," said Hosseini upon his return. "For one thing, it fortified in my mind the notion of how fortunate I am, and how fortunate my children are, to be living in a free country and to have so many things that we take for granted."

During his 45-city US book tour, which begins this week, event organizers will be distributing special bookmarks which call on readers to support refugees worldwide.

Hosseini will also once again mark World Refugee Day with UNHCR. On June 20 in San Francisco he'll take part in a panel discussion on the refugee agency's US theme, "A new home, a new life". Events are also being organized in Washington and Chicago with partner organizations planning commemorations in dozens of other cities.

By Tim Irwin in Washington, D.C., United States