Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

Technically speaking, aren’t the ones who were born in Pakistan considered Pakistani citizens…as far as I know, Pakistan is like the US in that birth on Pakistani soil automatically qualifies you for Pakistani citizenship…**

After Decades, Pakistan Forces Thousands of Afghans to Leave
**Officials Cite Extremism, Economics as Reasons for Closure of Camp in Northwest

By Candace Rondeaux
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, April 16, 2008; A09

JALOZAI, Pakistan, April 15 – About the only thing Aziz ur-Rehman remembers about his life in Afghanistan is his month-long walk through the mountains to Pakistan after the 1979 Soviet invasion.

He was 5 years old then – too young to remember much about the events that drove his family out of Afghanistan. Most of his memories were born here among the sprawling mass of mud-brick homes, tin-roofed shops and rutted dirt roads that make up the oldest Afghan refugee settlement in Pakistan. And when the Pakistani government closes the camp this week, most of his memories will be buried here.

Three decades after thousands of Afghan refugees fled to this U.N.-backed settlement in northwestern Pakistan, the Pakistani government has begun to demolish homes and other buildings here. Citing concerns about extremist influences in Jalozai and the economic burden of hosting 80,000 refugees, officials set a Tuesday deadline for closing the camp, located about 20 miles southwest of the city of Peshawar.

Pakistan had pressed for an earlier closure but was persuaded to wait until after the winter by U.N. officials, the Afghan government and tribal elders.

Still, years after fleeing Afghanistan, many refugees like ur-Rehman are far from eager to return to a war-torn country they have never really known. “Life is better here in Pakistan. There is peace here, and I have my own life,” ur-Rehman said.

Jalozai is one of more than 80 refugee encampments remaining in the country that are slated to close by the end of next year. So far, about 3,800 residents have left Jalozai for Afghanistan, according to U.N. officials.

More than 2 million registered Afghan refugees are settled in camps that stretch across parts of Pakistan’s northwestern frontier and tribal areas. Although an estimated 3 million Afghans have returned home since 2002, the continued presence of millions of others in places such as Jalozai has become a thorny issue for Pakistan since the start of U.S.-led counterterrorism operations in the region.

A major U.S. ally, Pakistan has struggled for years to quell the rising influence of Taliban fighters inside Afghan refugee settlements.

A Western diplomat in Pakistan familiar with the camps said that Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a former U.S. ally with ties to the Taliban, has long held sway over extremists in the camp at Jalozai and in Shamshatoo, another Afghan settlement near Peshawar, making the camps a refuge for Taliban fighters. “They provide the perfect location for disappearing and recruiting, which is why we have been pushing for closure of these camps. You don’t want to create a humanitarian crisis, but the security there is an issue,” the diplomat said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

More village than camp, Jalozai has a thriving economy built primarily on the transportation of goods and services across the Khyber Pass into Afghanistan. Homes are modest but have provided shelter for at least two generations of largely ethnic Pashtuns with Afghan roots. With fighting still underway in Afghanistan, many in the camp are fearful of what they will find on the other side of the border.

“I don’t want to go back. In Afghanistan, the situation is clear,” ur-Rehman said. “Every day there are bombings there, or suicide attacks. You never know where the attack is coming from.”

Many Jalozai refugees have roots in the eastern provinces of Afghanistan, where the fighting has been especially heavy in recent years. More than half, however, were born in Pakistan. Three-quarters of the camp population is younger than 28, according to Pakistan’s commission on Afghan refugees. Few have firsthand knowledge of life in Afghanistan.

Zalmay Rasul, Afghanistan’s national security adviser, said in an interview in Kabul last week that the government there is working to ensure a smooth return of Afghan refugees. Repatriation efforts have been complicated, however, because many Afghans are returning to conflict areas. “The return of refugees has already happened, and we are ready to accept those refugees who are coming,” Rasul said. “We need to have at least a humanitarian infrastructure in place, however, to receive them.”

According to U.N. and Pakistani government officials, the number of Afghan refugees who have returned to their country since the start of U.S. military operations in Afghanistan in late 2001 has slowed, while international aid for refugees has dropped precipitously in the wake of the fighting. About 1.6 million refugees left the camps for Afghanistan in 2002 compared with 133,000 in 2006, according to U.N. data.
Meanwhile, aid donated by the Office of the UN High Commission for Refugees has decreased from $28.9 million in 2001 to $9.3 million in 2007, a drop of 68 percent, a Pakistani government official said. “This is a very troubling aspect for us – that the world and the donors are losing interest in the refugee problem. There is donor fatigue in the international community, yet they are asking us to do more and more,” said Abdul Rauf Khan, the outgoing chief commissioner for Afghan refugees in Pakistan.

As Pakistan rushes to close the settlements, refugees are left with scant economic resources, according to Vivian Tan, a spokeswoman for the U.N. commissioner’s office in Pakistan. “This is a forgotten humanitarian crisis, yet the refugees are a major player in stabilizing the region,” Tan said. “If you push them out in one go, then you destabilize the region. If you get them to go gradually, then there can be peace and stability.”

Refugees who agree to return to Afghanistan receive about $100 each from the U.N. refugee agency to aid in the journey home. But with food, energy and lodging prices on the rise on both sides of the border, the money barely pays for transportation, several refugees at the camp said.

Abdullah, a bookseller at Jalozai, was an infant when his family moved to the settlement in the late 1980s. “Our whole extended family has been living here, and this camp is now like our ancestral village. We have seen the ups and downs of life here, with marriages and deaths in the family,” said Abdullah, who like many ethnic Pashtuns uses only one name.

His family has been looking for a new home in Peshawar or its suburbs but has not found anything affordable. Government workers have already bulldozed the bookstore that he, his wife and four children relied on for income.

“My shop is demolished, but my home is still there,” Abdullah said. “I will be the last person to leave this place.”

Special correspondent Imtiaz Ali in Peshawar contributed to this report.

*http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/15/AR2008041502895.html
*

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

I don't think so b/c the only way you get Pakistani citizenship is if you're parents were Pakistanis. So, Afghan refugees who moved to Pakistan their children would not be qualified for automatic citizenship.

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

I really dont think that’s the case.

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

that is really informative janab-e-ali. i bet most people would never have known of that.

too bad theres no advocacy for these vulnerable groups in pakistan.

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

Ok I stand corrected.

[quote]
too bad theres no advocacy for these vulnerable groups in pakistan.
[/quote]

Those are refugees & they have to go back home. Pakistan itself is a poor country & it can ill afford to house millions of refugees forever.

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

"Sindh aalmi yateem khana nahee"! Paleeja ji boli samraj laee goli!

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

According to him: Sindh suffered from three influxes of yateems:

First: 1947-1954 from India
Second: 1974 from biharies from Bangladesh
Thrist: 1980: Afghans

And they all should quit Sindh.

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

millions of those are Pakistanies by the very constitution everyone wants to have supreme.

since there is no differentiation between the Pakistanies you are arguing to have deported and yourself according to the constitution, could someone have you, or any random ethnicity deported by the same logic "pakistan is a poor country and it can ill afford to house millions of XYZ forever?"

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

Pakistan "forces" Afghans to leave "Pakistan"? A bit funny there. They were "refugees", they should've left Pakistan long time ago, why did they overstay?

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

why is it funny if Pakistan forced them out? and what about the ones that are Pakistanies by birth Captain sahab

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

Funny is how it is made out as if Pakistan forced its own people out while they were "refugees" not "immigrants". Pakistan is a little late in sending them back.

As for kids being born here, its unfortunate that they have to leave but its better that they stay with their parents till they grow up.

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

I wonder If this new Govt. would let that happen?
For sure things are going to be less messy on the border now. We may not need to take extreme step with these poor ppl.

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

"Influx of Afghan refugees to Sindh"? Almost 90% of 3.5 million Afghan refugees have always lived in NWFP and Balochestan and 2 million of them have already gone back to Afghanistan. I don't know how many of them live in Sindh and what Sindhis have suffered but I can only say that all of them better go back to Afghanistan as soon as possible and play their role in building up Afghanistan, most of them are anyhow leading a very miserable life in Pak and the life in Afghanistan cannot be worse.

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

There are many Afghanis in Karachi and Sohrab goth was probably mostly populated with them in 80s, now it is probably mixed populated. There are few Afghan “bastees” in the outskirts, don’t know the population size.

Amen :k:

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

janab-e-ali, the law you quoted does not apply to refugees, they are on a different status altogether.

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

Why not work something out with the Kabul government? Some humanitarian help must be possible? India and China should also help these people, if they want to be treated as regional biggies. Otherwise what is the difference between us and the 50acre countries?

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

ashie the law is pretty explicit that there is NO dependency on the status of the parent.

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

.

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

It's true that the ones born in Pakistan are Pakistani citizens.

However, Pakistan is deporting the Afghan-born parents and Afghan-born siblings of these people. I'm sure that many who could legally stay in Pakistan are going, either so that their elderly expelled parents, and other family members, are not forced to survive alone in Afghanistan.

Just giving birth to your child inside Pakistan does not give you the right to live in pakistan forever. These elderly Afghans are being sent back to where they came from.... any Pakistani citizens related to them are more than welcome to abandon their parents if they choose, but I'm willing to bet that all of them are honourable enough that the idea of abandoning their parents in another country is unthinkable to them so they are willing to leave Pakistan despite their pakistani citizenship.

Re: Pakistan Forces Out Afghan Refugees

supposing they were aware of their rights as Pakistanies MS. I doubt very many would know that it is possible for them to stay. If they can stay it is concievable that they could just invite their parents back to Pakistan as visiting relatives of Pakistani citizens.