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United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees in Pakistan
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Health workers at the UNHCR encashment
centre in Kabul check refugees returning from Iran as part of the repatriation
process. © UNHCR/J.Redden
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KABUL, July 31 (UNHCR) - More than half a million Afghan refugees
have gone home so far this year, and the strong pace of returns looks set
to continue through August, with most refugees in Pakistan's post-9/11 border
belt camps indicating a desire to repatriate, and others returning before
the start of the Afghan school year.
Since January this year, more than 273,000 refugees have returned to Afghanistan
from Iran, over 230,000 from Pakistan, and some 300 from other countries like
Austria, India, Kazakhstan and the United Kingdom.
The number of returnees looks set to increase as assistance in Pakistan's
"new" camps - set up near the Afghan border after the post-September
11, 2001 conflict - is halted at the end of August following a decision by
Pakistan's government.
Of the new camps, there are some 127,000 Afghan refugees in Balochistan province
and another 67,000 refugees in North West Frontier province.
Refugees in the 12 affected camps - six in each of the two provinces - were
informed of this in June. In a recent survey, the majority said they wished
to repatriate.
In all, more than 2.6 million Afghan refugees have repatriated since the UN
refugee agency started its voluntary return programme in early 2002. Another
443,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) have returned home with help from
UNHCR and its partners over the same period of time.
However, there are still more than 180,000 IDPs in Afghanistan. The majority
(145,000) are living in Zhare Dasht and Spin Boldak camps in the south, while
the west hosts some 20,000, the north 9,000 and the east and south-east host
more than 5,000 IDPs each.

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Instruction is given to newly returned
refugees on the dangers of the mines and unexploded ordnance dotting
the landscape of Afghanistan.© UNHCR/J.Redden
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Afghan refugees who return with UNHCR assistance receive a travel
grant and a small cash grant to help them cope with basic needs upon arrival.
The refugee agency and its partners are also working on a number of shelter,
water and income-generation projects to help them reintegrate in their war-devastated
home areas.
There are 1.2 million registered Afghan refugees remaining in
Iran and a similar number of Afghans of concern to UNHCR estimated in Pakistan.