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UNHCR moves 3,600 Afghan refugees from makeshift border camp

News Stories, 4 July 2003

© UNHCR/B.Baloch
Trucks carrying Afghan refugees leave the Chaman waiting area for Zhare Dasht.

CHAMAN, Pakistan, July 4 (UNHCR) The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) has relocated 3,651 Afghans to new sites inside Pakistan and Afghanistan during the first five days of an effort to clear a makeshift camp where thousands of asylum seekers had been stranded since early 2002.

Since the start of the operation on Monday, four convoys of trucks hired by UNHCR have carried 2,340 Afghans to the Mohammad Kheil refugee camp where they joined 37,000 other Afghans who have been living there since they fled the U.S.-led war against the Taliban in 2001. Another three UNHCR convoys carried 1,311 Afghans to the settlement of Zhare Dasht near the southern Afghanistan city of Kandahar. The pace of the move will accelerate in the coming days as more vehicles are made available.

UNHCR and the governments of Pakistan and Afghanistan agreed last May on a plan to empty the squalid "waiting area," just inside Pakistan's border with Afghanistan, where an estimated 20,000 Afghans had been camping for months on end without proper security or sanitation and with only limited aid.

Last month, almost all residents of the "waiting area" signed up to move out. Some 58 percent of the 18,685 people chose to go to Zhare Dasht settlement west of Kandahar, and the rest to Mohammad Kheil camp in Pakistan.

The "waiting area" makeshift camp was first created by Afghan asylum seekers when Pakistan closed its borders to new refugee arrivals in February 2002. However, the site located along a smuggling route was always considered unsuitable for a refugee camp. Last month, bodies of 22 fighters killed nearby in a battle with Afghan government troops were dumped in the centre of the refugee settlement in a grim reminder of the area's fragile security.

In addition, Pakistani authorities, anxious to prevent the area from becoming a permanent village, would not let aid workers provide more than basic humanitarian aid such as food and water. Aside from a few UNHCR tarpaulins distributed to emergency cases a year ago, the refugees lived under ragged home-made tents.

The UNHCR convoys will continue until all those requesting to move to the alternative sites have been relocated. But the agency has warned residents that once the move is completed, it will no longer assist those remaining in the "waiting area."

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UNHCR country pages

UNHCR providing shelter to Pakistan flood victims

The UN refugee agency is stepping up its efforts to distribute tents and other emergency supplies to families left homeless by severe flooding that hit parts of southern Pakistan in 2011. By early October, some 7,000 family tents had been provided to a national aid organization that is constructing small tent villages in southern Sindh province. A similar number of emergency household kits have also been supplied. Though the monsoon rains which caused the flooding have stopped, large areas remain under water and finding sufficient areas of dry land on which to pitch the tents remains a challenge. UNHCR has committed to providing 70,000 tents and relief kits to flood-stricken communities.

UNHCR providing shelter to Pakistan flood victims

Helping Flood Victims in Pakistan

UNHCR teams are distributing tents and other emergency aid to families displaced by severe flooding in Pakistan. More than five million people have been affected by this year's floods and government estimates put the number of families in urgent need of emergency shelter at over 200,000.

In southern Sindh province, which has been particularly hard hit, UNHCR has so far delivered 2,000 tents and 2,000 kits containing jerry cans, blankets and sleeping mats as well as 4,000 plastic sheets to be used for basic shelter. Many of the families displaced by the floods continue to live in makeshift shelters.

Helping Flood Victims in Pakistan

More focus needed on reintegration of former Afghan refugees

Many of the more than 5.5 million Afghan refugees who have returned home since 2002 are still struggling to survive. Lack of land, job opportunities and other services, combined with poor security in some places, has caused many returnees to head to urban areas. While cities offer the promise of informal day labour, the rising cost of rental accommodation and basic commodities relegate many returnees to life in one of the informal settlements which have mushroomed across Kabul in recent years. Some families are living under canvases and the constant threat of eviction, while others have gained a toe-hold in abandoned buildings around the city.

UNHCR gives humanitarian assistance to the most vulnerable, and is currently rallying support from donors and humanitarian and development agencies to redouble efforts to help returning refugees reintegrate in Afghanistan.

More focus needed on reintegration of former Afghan refugees

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