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United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees in Pakistan
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About UNHCR Pakistan |

With Afghans returning by the thousands, Pakistan currently
witnesses the largest repatriation movement in modern history
After years of caring for millions of Afghan refugees in Pakistan, repeatedly
dashed hopes that all could return home and the start of mass repatriation
in 2002, the UN Refugee Agency hopes that an end to this decades-old problem
may be emerging.
Under a Tripartite Agreement signed in 2003 between the governments of Pakistan and Afghanistan and the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, UNHCR will assist until 2005 the repatriation of refugees who want to return. Although the details of what will happen after that are still under discussion, the goal is to find a final, durable solution to this human tragedy that began a quarter century ago.
UNHCR is involved in many activities in Pakistan, running one of its most complex operations in the world. . In most countries UNHCR provides emergency assistance to newly arriving refugees or maintains refugee camps for extended periods of time or assists refugees to repatriate or helps refugees to be resettled to third countries. In Pakistan it provides all four types of aid at the same time. As well as repatriating Afghans wishing to go home, it cares for the more than one million Afghans refugees living in the refugee camps of Pakistan. It also deals with other nationalities seeking the protection of refugee status, seeks to resettle those for whom return to their homeland or local integration is impossible and works extensively to explain the needs of refugees. UNHCR's education assistance extends beyond working with the government to improve legislation, to providing instruction to officials and the public on the rights of refugees does extensive work to educate the public and government officials on the needs of refugees and Pakistan's obligations.
But for most people in the world, the role of the UN Refugee
Agency is synonymous with the Afghan refugees who have formed one of the world's
most protracted humanitarian problems. This remains the most prominent activity,
even after UNHCR assisted some 1.9 million Afghans to return home from Pakistan
in 2002 and 2003. The 1.5 million who repatriated in 2002 were the largest
number of returning refugees anywhere in the world since 1972.
While repatriation assistance remains UNHCR's dominating activity, it is already
focused on what must follow. The expansion of development and security throughout
Afghanistan will be crucial to drawing refugees home. But with about 1.1 million
Afghans still believed to live in refugee camps after two years of assisted
repatriation, it is clear that large numbers of refugees will not return during
the current repatriation programme. Many refugees, especially those living
in refugee camps rather than the poverty of the cities, have shown little
desire to go back to Afghanistan.
The discussion about what will happen to those left, both in the camps and the cities, is already underway with the government. UNHCR seeks one of three solutions for refugees - repatriation, local integration or resettlement in a third country.
UNHCR has offered to screen those remaining in Pakistan after the current repatriation programme to see who needs the continued protection of refugee status. Some of the refugees who fled Afghanistan since 1980 would be at risk if they return and will never be able to go home.
While Pakistan says it does not want local integration, it acknowledges
that many Afghans will remain after 2005. Ideas such as considering some Afghans
as migrants are possible solutions.
" Assist the vast number of Afghans who have voluntarily
decided to return home. Although the rate of return slowed in 2003, as expected,
the repatriation remains one of the greatest ever seen by UNHCR. After a lull
during the Afghan winter, it resumes each March.
" Provide protection and assistance to Afghan refugees in their camps
and settlements in the areas of health, education, water and sanitation. Vulnerable
cases such as women heads of households or disabled persons are given special
attention.
" Identify solutions for non-Afghan refugees in Pakistan. Depending on
their individual situation they are either assisted within Pakistan or repatriated
or proposed for resettlement.
" Resettle in a third country a limited number of Afghan refugees for
whom neither staying in Pakistan nor returning to their homeland is a safe
option, such as women at risk or security cases. The number of refugees UNHCR
resettles from Pakistan remains among the highest of any country, despite
the obstacles created by much more stringent security checks since the 11
September, 2001 attacks on the United States.
The history of UNHCR in Pakistan has been closely related to the Afghan refugees
in the country. The first office in Pakistan was established in 1980 to assist
and protect a large number of Afghans fleeing their country in the wake of
the 1979 Soviet invasion.
Ever since, the Afghans have been by far the largest group assisted by UNHCR
in Pakistan. Only in recent years have asylum seekers from other countries
started arriving in Pakistan.
For more than two decades Pakistan hosted the largest single refugee population
in the world. It was estimated that 1.1 million refugees remained in refugee
camps at the start of 2003, after more than 1.5 million repatriated the
previous year. In addition, an unknown but substantial number of Afghans
were known to live in Pakistan's urban areas.
It was decided by the Tripartite Commission to close three of the camps
established after 11 September 2001 early in 2004. Repatriation in the previous
two years had reduced the populations and the locations, without any water,
made them hard to maintain.
Afghan refugees in Pakistan are not a homogeneous group. They fled to Pakistan
in several waves starting with the Soviet invasion of their country in 1979.
They came from different parts of Afghanistan and have various ethnic backgrounds.
The last refugee wave - nearly 300,000 Afghans -- reached Pakistan after
the attacks of 11 September 2001.
Conditions for Afghan refugees in Pakistan differ greatly. Some still live
in tents, others in mud house settlements that look like the villages they
left behind. Those in the camps established after the 11 September attacks
receive food assistance through the World Food Programme while all the camps
receive medical and education support. In urban areas, few Afghan refugees
are fully integrated and well-off. The majority of urban refugees are in
slum areas of Pakistan's major cities, barely surviving on casual labour.
Understandably, the unprecedented rush of Afghans seeking to return to their
country in 2002 came first and foremost from the urban areas.
While UNHCR assists all refugees in need of protection, vulnerable
cases have always been of special concern to the UN agency. Many Afghan refugee
women are confronted with a very conservative environment where their freedom
of movement and action is severely restricted. Afghan refugee women face gender-related
protection problems, including gender based violence, forced marriages and
denial of their rights to education or employment.
UNHCR uses a community-based approach to address them. Changes are not imposed
but rather are initiated by the women themselves. UNHCR promotes women committees
in refugee camps to address gender-based problems.
The Refugee Agency funds training programmes for female Afghan health workers
and animators and supports income generating projects and vocational training
courses for women in many camps.
Although Afghans are by far the largest group of concern to
UNHCR in Pakistan, there are also more than 650 non-Afghans accepted as refugees
and living in Pakistan, and more than 1,000 non-Afghans seeking asylum. These
refugees are mainly Somalis, Iraqis and Iranians. Most live in the twin cities
of Islamabad and Rawalpindi. Nearly half of those refugees consist of single
female-headed households with children.
Under an agreement with the Government in 2003, non-Afghan refugees recognised
by
UNHCR at the time were given permission to work.
In addition, UNHCR assists some destitute refugees with a basic subsistence
allowance, educational assistance and medical care.
Most of the non-Afghan refugees wish to be resettled in third countries. For
some this is impossible as they have been rejected by several resettlement
countries. In those cases, UNHCR tries to organise voluntary repatriation
where viable. The remainder have no option but to stay in Pakistan.