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Afghanistan at the crossroads: Invest in Afghan returns or risk further displacement, cautions UNHCR

News Stories, 18 November 2008

© UNHCR/V.Tan
High Commissioner António Guterres listens to the problems of this year's returnees at Chamtala makeshift settlement in Nangarhar province, eastern Afghanistan.

JALALABAD, Afghanistan, November 18 (UNHCR) Afghan returnees need more support to settle back home, or could be uprooted again, warned UN refugee agency chief António Guterres as he started a five-day visit to Afghanistan this week.

The High Commissioner arrived in Jalalabad in eastern Afghanistan on Monday and met with former Afghan refugees who had returned from Pakistan. At Chamtala, a makeshift settlement of tents in the windswept desert, the returnees told him about their immense needs.

"For the time being, our needs are great," said Malik Nawab, an Afghan elder at the settlement. "We need shelter, food, schools, and we're asking UNHCR not to forget us."

Most of Chamtala's 3,500 families returned this summer after the closure of Jalozai refugee village in north-western Pakistan. Guterres noted that in addition to the distribution of UNHCR relief items, the government had agreed to allocate land for them at Chamtala, and promised to push for the speedy and fair distribution of plots.

"Many of you said a plot is not enough," Guterres told the elders. "It is necessary to build shelter, provide safe water supply and health facilities. Most important are job opportunities, the possibility to earn an income for the family. UNHCR has a limited mandate and resources. But we're working with the government and mobilizing development partners to make life better."

At Sheikh Mesri township, a three-year-old government land allocation site, returnees from 2005 told the High Commissioner they needed a high school to supplement the existing primary school; a 24-hour clinic; and affordable public transport to find work in Jalalabad city, some 14 kilometres away.

"If you can improve facilities here, our living conditions will be even better than Jalalabad," said an elder at Sheikh Mesri, currently home to some 1,000 returnee families. "And if the international support continues, many more refugees could come back to Afghanistan."

More than 5 million Afghan refugees have returned home since 2002, mostly from Iran and Pakistan. While the large majority have been able to go back to their areas of origin, more recent returnees are facing a lack of land, shelter, security and socio-economic opportunities in their villages.

In Kabul on Tuesday, the High Commissioner met Afghans displaced by conflict in Wardak and Kapisa provinces. He also spoke to a group of returnee families who had deserted their government-allocated land in Parwan province due to a lack of jobs, and are now living in a Kabul slum where they survive by begging and washing cars. Guterres pledged to provide them with winterization supplies and to negotiate a bus service for job seekers in the Parwan township.

"Today my main concerns are that many returnees are becoming displaced within Afghanistan," said the UNHCR chief. "Others have gone back to live as irregular migrants in the region. They have no documentation or legal status, and are vulnerable to smugglers and dangerous situations." He stressed that sustainable returns are contingent on the mobilization of government capacity in Afghanistan and increased international support for development projects.

On Wednesday, Guterres will join Afghan Foreign Minister Rangin Dadfar Spanta in chairing an international conference on the return and reintegration of Afghan refugees. The event will seek international support to strengthen the reintegration component of the Afghanistan National Development Strategy (ANDS).

By Vivian Tan in Jalalabad, Afghanistan

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UNHCR country pages

Rebuilding Lives in Afghanistan

With elections scheduled in October, 2004 is a crucial year for the future of Afghanistan, and Afghans are returning to their homeland in record numbers. In the first seven months of 2004 alone, more than half a million returned from exile. In all, more than 3.6 million Afghans have returned since UNHCR's voluntary repatriation programme started in 2002.

The UN refugee agency and its partner organisations are working hard to help the returnees rebuild their lives in Afghanistan. Returnees receive a grant to cover basic needs, as well as access to medical facilities, immunisations and landmine awareness training.

UNHCR's housing programme provides tool kits and building supplies for families to build new homes where old ones have been destroyed. The agency also supports the rehabilitation of public buildings as well as programmes to rehabilitate the water supply, vocational training and cash-for-work projects.

Rebuilding Lives in Afghanistan

Afghanistan: Rebuilding a War-Torn Country

The cycle of life has started again in Afghanistan as returnees put their shoulders to the wheel to rebuild their war-torn country.

Return is only the first step on Afghanistan's long road to recovery. UNHCR is helping returnees settle back home with repatriation packages, shelter kits, mine-awareness training and vaccination against diseases. Slowly but surely, Afghans across the land are reuniting with loved ones, reconstructing homes, going back to school and resuming work. A new phase in their lives has begun.

Watch the process of return, reintegration, rehabilitation and reconstruction unfold in Afghanistan through this gallery.

Afghanistan: Rebuilding a War-Torn Country

Home Without Land

Land is hot property in mountainous Afghanistan, and the lack of it is a major reason Afghans in exile do not want to return.

Although landless returnees are eligible for the Afghan government's land allocation scheme, demand far outstrips supply. By the end of 2007, the authorities were developing 14 settlements countrywide. Nearly 300,000 returnee families had applied for land, out of which 61,000 had been selected and 3,400 families had actually moved into the settlements.

Desperate returnees sometimes have to camp in open areas or squat in abandoned buildings. Others occupy disputed land where aid agencies are not allowed to build permanent structures such as wells or schools.

One resilient community planted itself in a desert area called Tangi in eastern Afghanistan. With help from the Afghan private sector and the international community, water, homes, mosques and other facilities have sprouted – proof that the right investment and commitment can turn barren land into the good earth.

Posted on 31 January 2008

Home Without Land

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