Fighting forces most returning Afghans to flee anew

At least five people killed, 24 wounded as gunmen stormed in the Save the Children aid agency, Wednesday

Afghans much more united in wanting to join reconciliation process than they were two years ago, says Mohammad Sadiq. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE

LONDON:
Almost three in four Afghans who return home after seeking sanctuary abroad are forced to flee again due to fresh fighting, an aid agency said on Wednesday as it urged an end to deportations to the war-torn country.

Violence escalated in Afghanistan in 2017, with 360,000 people forced from their homes and more than 2,600 civilians killed, according to the United Nations.

The Taliban have made steady inroads since NATO ended its main combat operation in 2014 and are now estimated to control or contest at least 40 per cent of the country.

‘Extend stay of Afghan refugees in the country’

Yet hundreds of thousands of Afghans who fled overseas in recent decades are returning to the country - mainly from neighboring Iran and Pakistan, where more than 6 million took shelter after the 1979 Soviet invasion, the UN says.

Most find war and poverty when they get there, said the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) aid agency.

“They were immediately engulfed in the conflict and pushed to flee again,” NRC secretary general Jan Egeland told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone.

Three-quarters of those who go back find it impossible to settle in their old home because of the conflict, according to an NRC survey of more than 2,500 families.


Some 72 per cent said they were simply displaced again.

Many end up living with relatives or in makeshift camps, with limited jobs, and are often forced to skip meals and send children to work instead of school, the report said.

Violence has also made it increasingly difficult for aid groups to help those in need, Egeland said.

On Wednesday, at least five people were killed and 24 wounded as gunmen stormed an office of the Save the Children aid agency in the eastern city of Jalalabad in an attack claimed by Islamic State.

“It’s wicked(ly) unsafe to be in Afghanistan ... it is more unsafe then ever,” Egeland said. “This is not the time to return anyone”.

Afghan refugees may win extension in stay

More than half a million Afghans spontaneously returned or were deported back to the country in 2017, mainly from Iran and Pakistan, according to the UN.

Last year, Human Rights Watch accused the UN of allowing Pakistan to forcibly evict Afghan refugees in violation of international law.

Pakistan denies systematic harassment of the refugees by authorities. It claims the country has demonstrated generosity in hosting the Afghans despite its economic limitations.
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