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Pakistan contributes $5 million towards return of Afghan refugees

Briefing Notes, 8 May 2007

This is a summary of what was said by UNHCR spokesperson Ron Redmond to whom quoted text may be attributed at the press briefing, on 8 May 2007, at the Palais des Nations in Geneva.

Pakistan's Federal Minister for States and Frontier Regions, Sardar Yar Muhammad Rind, is in Geneva this week. Tomorrow (Wednesday 9 May), Mr Rind will meet High Commissioner António Guterres and will present him with a cheque for approximately US$ 5 million to help Afghan refugees return to their country.

The Government of Pakistan has also announced a separate contribution of some $1 million towards the registration and de-registration of Afghans in Pakistan.

UNHCR urgently requires an increase in its voluntary repatriation and integration programme by an additional $15 million, and is grateful to the government of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan for this generous and timely contribution towards this effort.

Since 2002, more than 5 million Afghans have returned home from Pakistan (3.2 million) and the Islamic Republic of Iran (1.8 million). But in 2006, there was a significant decline in repatriation, with 133,000 persons returning from Pakistan and 5,000 persons from Iran. UNHCR believes that the main factors behind the decline in returns are the deteriorating security situation in Afghanistan, the challenging economic and social conditions inside the country, and the long exile of the remaining 3 million Afghans, half of whom were born outside Afghanistan.

In an effort to maintain the momentum of voluntary repatriation in 2007, and in close consultation with the governments of Afghanistan, Iran, and Pakistan, UNHCR earlier this year increased the repatriation grant given to Afghan returnees from $60 to $100 per person. The additional money is designed to help returnee families meet initial essential needs on their return home.

Following further consultations, it was also decided that, on an exceptional and time-limited basis (until mid-April), those Afghans who did not register during the recent mandatory registration exercise carried out in Pakistan but who wanted to return should also receive this increased assistance package. As a result, some 205,000 unregistered Afghans returned home with the increased cash grant between 1 March and 15 April.

UNHCR had set aside $15 million to support 150,000 persons with the enhanced repatriation package. But the return of an additional 205,000 unregistered Afghans surpassed that amount.

With the additional $15 million now required, the total budget for UNHCR's repatriation operation this year will be $99 million, for which donor support is urgently needed. At present, the budget is about a third funded.

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UNHCR country pages

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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.

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