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United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees in Pakistan
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ISLAMABAD, April 14 (UNHCR) - Attia Ali had a brother in Denmark, a sister in the Netherlands and a well-paid job in Pakistan. It is a tribute to the enduring draw and improving prospects of Afghanistan that she has quit her job and is now headed back to her homeland.
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"Since the situation in my country is improving, plus almost all Afghans are moving back to Afghanistan, I feel homesick," she said at the UNHCR office in Islamabad, where she has worked for five years as a translator in interviews with asylum seekers. "I want to go to my country, settle down and stay with my father." Ali, a 40-year-old former university instructor, reflects a change in the profile of those Afghans who are returning from Pakistan. The 1.6 million who flooded back home in 2002 after the overthrow of the Taliban government were largely new arrivals, mostly poor and uneducated. Ali, a 40-year-old former university instructor, reflects a |
Attia Ali (right) receiving her voluntary repatriation form from UNHCR Representative in Pakistan, Guenet Guebre-Christos, while her former colleagues look on. © UNHCR/A.Shahzad |
change in the profile of those Afghans who are returning from Pakistan. The 1.6 million who flooded back home in 2002 after the overthrow of the Taliban government were largely new arrivals, mostly poor and uneducated.
Now many are like Ali - Afghans who are well-established in
Pakistan and could easily be expected to consider it home. They are giving
up their present occupations but are confident that the future lies in re-establishing
themselves in an Afghanistan that is finally emerging from decades of war.
Homayun Saqib, the only other Afghan member of the UNHCR staff
in Islamabad - regulations prohibit hiring of refugees other than in specialised
roles like translation - has also announced plans to leave Pakistan at the
end of the month. After five years with the United Nations, he is resigning
to take up a new job in Afghanistan.
Ali's life in Pakistan began at the start of 1993 when Kabul,
which had been largely untouched by the fighting of the 1980s during the Soviet
occupation, became a battlefield between warring mujahideen militias. Kabul
University, where she had been teaching English, was a devastated frontline
where illiterate gunmen had replaced students.
"The civil war was going on. At that time the Hekmatyar
group was fighting with different factions and since we had been displaced
from several areas, we had no choice but to flee," she said. "They
were firing a thousand rockets a day."
With no prospect of any improvement, she fled with her father,
her brother and his family. In Pakistan she taught English at a private institution
in Islamabad. In 2000, she joined UNHCR, where her fluency in Dari, one of
Afghanistan's two main languages, and English was needed by the protection
section.
During her exile, her brother was accepted as a refugee by Denmark
and a sister was given a new life in the Netherlands. But with the fall of
the Taliban in late 2001, Ali saw the first hope of a return to her beloved
Kabul. When lines of trucks carried refugees back to Afghanistan in the following
months, she herself went to Kabul to check whether she could join the return.
"Conditions were very bad, especially in security - kidnappings and robberies
were taking place. There was also no shelter," she said. Ali returned
to Islamabad to see if peace would hold, if order could be restored and rebuilding
begun.
While aid funds were available, the problems of a country that
had been at war since the end of the 1970s were overwhelming. Understandably,
Afghans with the option of staying in Pakistan or Iran - the two main countries
of asylum through the wars - did not join the initial rush back to Afghanistan.
"This year my family, who had already returned, said it
was better. When I went, I found people much happier - that's why I am looking
forward to restarting my life in Afghanistan," Ali said.
She secured a job with the UN organization involved in preparing
for the country's legislative elections expected later this year and asked
if she could return under the same UNHCR voluntary repatriation programme
that has assisted 2.3 million Afghans to go home from Pakistan since 2002.
Ali does not need the modest financial assistance - a travel
grant of $13 to reach Kabul and an extra $12 to help get re-established -
but the documents provided by UNHCR will ease the task of moving her belongings
back. Like other returnees, she arranged her own transport - a van to carry
the belongings of herself, her aunt and uncle - and after final checks of
documents by UNHCR, set off on the road back to Afghanistan.
"In 1992, it was clear to all the civilian population that
the country would deteriorate further. This year I feel the start of improvement
- conditions will get better and development will happen," Ali said.
"This year a different kind of people are going back, people who have
jobs here but, like me, they want to return. I have resigned to return to
my country."