Katie Paul
|
Jul 10, 2008 10:48 AM
Refugees International researchers were surprised when they showed
up in Taghi Naghi, an area in northwestern Afghanistan in June to
assess one of the country’s 11 “land allocation schemes” for returning
refugees. What they found differed sharply from the government’s plans
for the hundreds of thousands of people returning from exile in
Pakistan and Iran. Despite UN objections, the shelters had been built
in the desert, an hour’s trip to the nearest city of Herat. A water
pump was hooked up to a dry well, but an NGO trucking in water said
their contract was going to run out soon after the visit. Only 12
families were occupying the more than 200 shelters that had been built,
none of whom had any means of finding employment. According to one man
living at Taghi Naghi, he might be forced to move his family to Herat
despite being unable to pay its high city rents, since it was becoming
increasingly difficult to feed his children.
The floundering Taghi Naghi project, one of 55 planned across
Afghanistan, cost $2 million, and is just one example of how the
refugee situation in Afghanistan is bad and growing worse, according to a Refugees International (RI) report published July 10.
Since things started looking up for Afghanistan in 2002, the
largest-ever refugee homecoming brought more than 5 million Afghan
refugees back into the country, some of whom had been living in exile
for three decades as their country weathered war with the Soviets,
Taliban rule, and the NATO invasion. But over 3 million people are
still stranded in exile, RI says, while many of those who have returned
are ill-equipped to deal with Afghanistan’s harsh land and security
crises. Deteriorating conditions in recent months due to a food crisis
and an insurgency again on the rise have further complicated matters,
while an impending Pakistani threat to bulldoze camps in their country
by the end of 2009 has contributed an added time pressure to deal with
the problems.
“The situation in Afghanistan is worsening, and we’re running the
risk of losing the gains we’ve made in the past few years,” said RI
advocate Patrick Duplat, who produced the report after traveling with a
colleague for a month to meet with refugees in Pakistan and returnees
in Afghanistan. “Of course, the situation in general in Afghanistan is
quite dire. From 40 to 60 percent of the country is inaccessible, so
all Afghans are vulnerable. But that being said, a large percentage of
the population--5 million people--are particularly vulnerable.”
The
report blames a lack of planning and coordination on the part of both
Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s government and its international
backers, who provide over 90 percent of the country’s budget. While
billions of dollars have been invested in reconstruction projects in Afghanistan
since 2001, too few have made their way to real development projects,
RI contends; large-scale infrastructure and counter-insurgency efforts
have sapped most of the funds.
As a result, RI is calling on donors to coordinate and fund their
efforts in Afghanistan at a joint UN and Afghan conference in Kabul in
November. “What we’d like to see is the returnees being integrated into
the mainstream national programs,” said Duplat, cautioning that a
failure to act could lead refugees to either try their luck at
returning to Pakistan or swell the ranks of Afghanistan’s urban poor. A
lack of resources is not the problem, he says; the international
community just needs to put its money where its mouth is to integrate
refugees without forcibly displacing them, whether they want to come
back to Afghanistan or stay in Pakistan permanently.
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