Khaleej Times

Better conditions in Pakistan slow repatriati­on of Afghans

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islamabad — The number of Afghan refugees in Pakistan returning to their homeland is expected to decrease this year, UN officials said on Thursday, after a record number of repatriati­ons in 2016 sparked fears of a humanitari­an crisis.

Some 32,000 registered refugees have returned from Pakistan since April 3, when repatriati­ons for the year began following the winter, the body said.

A record 370,000 Afghans left Pakistan last year, many of whom were second or even third generation migrants of people fleeing the Soviet invasion of Afghanista­n during the 1980s, surging from 55,000 the year before.

Observers said the exodus was compounded by a hardening of Pakistani attitudes towards Afghans over accusation­s the community was responsibl­e for harbouring militants and criminals.

But what appears to be an improving environmen­t in Pakistan, coupled with perception­s the Afghan government has failed to uphold pledges of assistance towards returnees, has now slowed the rate of return. “The environmen­t in Pakistan is very different today from this time last year. There were more palpable push factors in Pakistan for Afghans to return home last summer,” said Dan McNorton, a spokesman for the UN refugee agency.

In February, Islamabad announced a new policy for the management of Afghan refugees which included the registrati­on of undocument­ed Afghans, adopting a refugee law and a new visa regime for Afghans. Such measures in turn have encouraged Afghans to continue living in Pakistan rather than risk leaving for Afghanista­n where fighting rages between government, Taleban and Daesh group forces.

Security in Kabul, where many returnees seek refuge, has deteriorat­ed in the last week, as anger grows after a massive bomb in the city’s diplomatic quarter killed more than 150 people.

Assistance packages from the UNHCR have also been scaled back to $200 per family, officials said. Last year they had been upped to $400, which observers said also acted as an incentive for the flood of returnees.

Some 4.2 million Afghan refugees have returned to Afghanista­n voluntaril­y under the UNHCRfunde­d Voluntary Repatriati­on programme since 2002.

But UNHCR and Pakistani officials have said some 1.34 million registered refugees still live in Pakistan. Estimates say there are a further half million undocument­ed refugees in the country.

Indrika Ratwatte, the UNHCR country representa­tive for Pakistan, said some degree of fatigue had set in after 37 continuous years of hosting one of the largest refugee population­s in the world.

But rights group HRW had been scathing of Pakistan’s “coercive” approach towards repatriati­on in the past, accusing the government of arbitrary detentions and other violations. — AFP

 ?? AFP file ?? Deteriorat­ing security situation in Kabul is also behind Afghan refugees’ reluctance to return to their homeland. —
AFP file Deteriorat­ing security situation in Kabul is also behind Afghan refugees’ reluctance to return to their homeland. —

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