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UNHCR concerned about conflict-driven displacement in southern Afghanistan

Briefing Notes, 27 March 2007

This is a summary of what was said by UNHCR spokesperson Jennifer Pagonis to whom quoted text may be attributed at the press briefing, on 27 March 2007, at the Palais des Nations in Geneva.

The UN refugee agency is concerned about the recent displacement of Afghans due to the ongoing conflict in Afghanistan's southern provinces of Helmand and Kandahar. Despite limited access for security reasons, we have been working in past weeks with the Afghan government, UNAMA and other UN agencies to help nearly 5,000 families in Helmand province. In February 2007, the governor of Helmand province in southern Afghanistan approached the UN to assist 3,200 families from Kajaki district, where intense fighting had been reported. This followed another request in early February to assist some 1,600 battle-affected families from Musa Qala district.

WFP, UNICEF and UNHCR provided food and relief items: tents, plastic sheets, blankets, hurricane lanterns, soap, family kits, warm clothes to the group from Musa Qala, and are trying to reach out to the group from Kajaki. All actors are working together to create a more effective mechanism to find out the exact number of people displaced by the ongoing conflict in the south and the amount of assistance they need. Under the current security situation, access by UN agencies and our partners remains limited.

Last summer, the government estimated that 15,000 families were displaced by intense fighting in the two districts of Panjwai and Zhari in Kandahar province. They settled mainly in and around Kandahar city. Recent reports suggest that most of them have since returned to their home areas. In support of the government's Disaster Management Committee (DMC) and the Department of Rural Rehabilitation (DRRD) the UN, IOM, and other aid agencies provided food and relief items to 2,000 of the most vulnerable IDP families.

Insecurity and lack of access in the south are also affecting UNHCR's efforts to assist Afghans who had been displaced by previous conflicts and drought before 2002. It is estimated that of this group of approximately 130,000 internally displaced people (IDPs), the majority (112,000) are in the south. Of the remaining numbers, 3,800 are in the north, 12,200 in the west and 3,600 in the central regions. Access to health and other basic services have been drastically reduced since the beginning of the insurgency in the south.

Since 2002, over half a million IDPs have received UNHCR assistance to return home while another 450,000 have gone back on their own. This year will be the last year of assisted IDP returns. UNHCR plans to help some 2,500 families (15,000 individuals) to return to their home areas. As part of its overall approach to solutions, UNHCR is currently discussing with the authorities in Kandahar and elsewhere in the country how those IDPs who may have not returned by the end of 2007 can be integrated where they are.

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UNHCR country pages

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

Angelina Jolie promotes reintegration of Afghan returnees

UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador Angelina Jolie in March 2011 returned to Afghanistan. On her second trip to the country, the acclaimed actress called for greater focus to be put on the reintegration of former refugees. More than 5.5 million refugees have returned since 2002, mainly from Pakistan and Iran, and now make up 20 per cent of the population. UNHCR is concerned that too many of these refugees continue to live without jobs, shelter and other basic needs.

Jolie caught up with several families she had met in 2008, still living in a dilapidated warehouse in Kabul. She was moved to see the families struggling to survive in the cold damp building. Children spend their days washing cars for money instead of attending school; the old and sick told Jolie of their pain to be such a burden on the young.

The actress also visited returned refugees living on the Alice Ghan and Barikab land allocation schemes north of Kabul. The returnees told her they were grateful for their houses but needed help with livelihoods. Jolie also visited Qala Gadu village, where she is funding the construction of a girls' primary school.

Angelina Jolie promotes reintegration of Afghan returnees

Afghanistan: An Uncertain Future

For over a quarter of a century, Afghanistan has been devastated by conflict and civil strife, with some 8 million people uprooted internally and in neighbouring countries. The overthrow of the Taliban in 2001 resulted in one of the largest and most successful return operations in history.

Seven years on, more than 5 million Afghan refugees have returned - increasing Afghanistan's population by an estimated 20 percent.The large majority have gone back to their areas of origin. However, some recent returnees are facing more difficulties as the country's absorption capacity reaches its limits in some areas. Last year, some Afghans returned before they were ready or able to successfully reintegrate due to the closure of refugee villages as well as the deteriorating conditions in Pakistan. In consequence, 30,000 Afghan refugees returned to further displacement in their homeland, unable to return to their villages due to conflict, lack of land, shelter materials, basic services and job opportunities. These challenges have been compounded elsewhere across the country by food insecurity and severe drought.

UNHCR and the Afghan Foreign Ministry highlighted the requirements for sustainable refugee return and reintegration at an international conference in Kabul in November 2008. The donor community welcomed the inclusion of refugee reintegration within the government's five-year national development strategy and the emphasis on land, shelter, water, sanitation, education, health care and livelihoods. It is anticipated that repatriation and reintegration will become more challenging in future.

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