AFGHANISTAN: Returnees should return to province - 28-Sep-05
IRIN
AFGHANISTAN: Returnees should return to their provinces
28 September 2005
[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United
Nations]
KABUL, 28 September (IRIN) - Returnees to Afghanistan from both Pakistan
and Iran will only get land for shelters in their province of origin,
the government announced on Wednesday in the Afghan capital, Kabul.
"In order to reduce crowding here in the capital and provide equal
reconstruction opportunities to all provinces across the country, the
government will soon implement the plan of providing land for shelter
for returnees in their own related provinces," Hafiz Nadeem, public
information officer for the Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation
(MoRR), said, adding one of the major problems causing slow repatriation
was the lack of shelter.
Lack of shelter remains a key issue in Afghanistan as millions of
returned refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs) slowly seek to
pick up their lives, only to find their villages and homes destroyed.
Since the Taliban were ousted in December 2001, rent prices in the
capital have skyrocketed, fuelled in part by the arrival in strength of
foreign NGOs, with an average family house now going for up to US $800
per month - far beyond the reach of Kabul residents.
The office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
has praised the government's plan. Nader Farhad, spokesman for UNHCR in
Kabul, said the plan would further accelerate the repatriation process
from the neighbouring countries, adding the United Nations was
encouraging returnees to go back to their own provinces.
But a large number of returned refugees suffering from unemployment, a
severe lack of shelter, and poverty, prefer to live in the capital,
knowing that they will not find work opportunities if they return to
their place of origin.
"The government's decision is not reasonable because we cannot find work
outside the capital," said 25-year-old Mohammad Fardeen of Parwan
province, who returned from Iran and is living in a dusty shell of a
battle-scarred building in the Dehmazang area of Kabul.
"If the government provides work opportunities in provinces than it is a
good decision. Unemployment is worse than the lack of shelter,"
complained 46-year-old Abdullah of Panjshir, representative of refugees
in Dehmazang.
Meanwhile, to tackle the problem of lack of shelter, the Ministry of
Women's Affairs is planning to build accommodation for at least 1
million vulnerable Afghan women across the country, with an agreement
signed with a German construction company to launch the countrywide
project.
According to UNHCR, the number of Afghans seeking assistance to return
home this year surpassed 400,000 and now stands at just under 3.5
million. Since 2002, including those who have returned without
assistance, the overall total has now reached 4.2 million, according to
the UN refugee agency.
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2005
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