"/>
Feature: For many Pakistan-settled Afghan refugees "home" is an unfamiliar land
Source: Xinhua   2018-02-21 19:24:11

by Raheela Nazir

ISLAMABAD, Feb. 21 (Xinhua) -- Wali Khan Azizi used to run a small carpet shop in Islamabad but the 55-year-old Afghan who had been staying in Islamabad as a refugee sold his carpets and other household goods recently in anticipation of returning to Afghanistan.

It would be like becoming an "immigrant" all over again, as most of the Afghan refugees living in Pakistan have been residing here for decades, said Azizi. "What will I do there?" asked the bearded Afghan when asked why he does not want to return his homeland.

Azizi, among millions of Afghan refugees, shifted to Pakistan after the Soviet Union invasion of Afghanistan. The first wave of Afghan refugees to Pakistan began at that time in the late 1970s. By the end of 2001, there were more than 4 millions Afghan refugees in Pakistan.

Azizi's worries came after the Pakistani government's decision on Jan. 31 to grant only a two-month extension for their permission to stay in Pakistan for a total of 1.4 million registered Afghan refugees, citing security and economic threats the country is facing due to the refugees.

Islamabad's move has caused chaos among refugee families. Uncertainty and fear has gripped Afghan refugees as the 60-day deadline for refugee repatriation is approaching.

According to the Ministry of States and Frontier Regions (SAFRON) here, the country has been home to millions of Afghan refugees for the past 33 years. Despite the repatriation of approximately 3.7 million since 2002.

In addition, the government has registered 700,000 undocumented Afghans during a six-month campaign, which began last August, according to SAFRON.

Pakistan has extended the validity of Afghan refugees' stay permission at least seven times in the past, but the government here said that January's extension would be the last one.

"Pakistan's economy has carried the burden of hosting Afghan refugees for a long time and under the present circumstances cannot sustain it further," said a statement by the Pakistani federal cabinet last month.

Pakistan has commitments with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and the Afghan government that there would be no forced returns.

"We want Afghan refugees to return with dignity as soon as possible. No doubt volunteer repatriation is the focus, we all should take steps for creating favorable conditions for their return," Pakistani Foreign Ministry spokesperson Muhammad Faisal said in a recent briefing.

In fact, relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan have deteriorated in recent years and tension heightened after several terror attacks in both countries. Tension was further stoked as they accused each other's insurgents of carrying out the attacks.

On Saturday, Pakistani army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa said at the Munich Security Conference in Germany that Pakistan had been hosting 3 million Afghan refugees and now, the time had come to repatriate these refugees to their own country in order to defeat terrorism.

"It is the only way we can ensure that no one is misusing our hospitality and soil for mischief in Afghanistan," the army chief said.

Following a U.S. drone strike on Jan. 25 in the northwestern Pakistani district of Kurram, Pakistan's military said the target had been hiding in an Afghan refugee camp.

Mirvaiz Khan, an Afghan residing in Islamabad as a refugee, spent many sleepless nights due to Pakistan's decision to repatriate Afghan refugees.

"I run a well-settled food business under the name of Afghan cuisine in Islamabad, but I don't see any chance of my success in Afghanistan in the presence of terrorism. My family is a business community, we have no land, no other source of income in Afghanistan," Khan told Xinhua.

The conditions are so bleak in Afghanistan that many returnees are sneaking back across the porous border and quietly taking up their lives in Pakistan. In 2016, nearly 400,000 refugees returned to their homeland during a campaign by Pakistan. Last year, about 60,000 came back again, said a senior Pakistani government official.

Abdullah Khan, 60, came to Pakistan from Afghanistan when he was 15. After living for more than four decades in Peshawar, a northwestern city in Pakistan, he was repatriated with his wife and children in 2016 but came back a few months later.

"It was the most unpleasant experience in my life," Khan told Xinhua, adding that there were no doctors, no clinics, no clean water and no employment. Basically nothing in Afghanistan but bad roads with the constant fear of a brutal death at the hands of terrorists.

The elders of the refugees in Peshawar where most of the Afghan refugees are residing, also expressed discontentment at the "leaving order" and formed a committee to start a campaign to convince the government to review the deadline.

"The return of refugees is not possible until peace is restored in Afghanistan," said Malik Abdul Ghafar Shinwari, a senior member of the committee, adding that Pakistan must give three to five years' notice to the refugees as the situation in Afghanistan is not favorable for living a normal life.

The UNHCR in Pakistan is facilitating a voluntary repatriation program for Afghan refugees and pays 200 U.S. dollars to every refugee upon returning to Afghanistan. The voluntary return program has been suspended due to winter since October 2017 and will restart in March again, said government officials.

"It took 30 years of my life to reach a position where I can provide a shelter for my family and one of my sons is earning for us now, while the other is going to school. If we go back to Afghanistan, it will take another 30 years to build a house and get jobs," Azizi said.

The middle-aged eyes grew misty as he recalled his life in Pakistan. "Though life in Pakistan was not a bed of roses at least I always feel safe here, and my children have an opportunity to get quality education and healthcare," he explained.

Editor: Yurou
Related News
Xinhuanet

Feature: For many Pakistan-settled Afghan refugees "home" is an unfamiliar land

Source: Xinhua 2018-02-21 19:24:11
[Editor: huaxia]

by Raheela Nazir

ISLAMABAD, Feb. 21 (Xinhua) -- Wali Khan Azizi used to run a small carpet shop in Islamabad but the 55-year-old Afghan who had been staying in Islamabad as a refugee sold his carpets and other household goods recently in anticipation of returning to Afghanistan.

It would be like becoming an "immigrant" all over again, as most of the Afghan refugees living in Pakistan have been residing here for decades, said Azizi. "What will I do there?" asked the bearded Afghan when asked why he does not want to return his homeland.

Azizi, among millions of Afghan refugees, shifted to Pakistan after the Soviet Union invasion of Afghanistan. The first wave of Afghan refugees to Pakistan began at that time in the late 1970s. By the end of 2001, there were more than 4 millions Afghan refugees in Pakistan.

Azizi's worries came after the Pakistani government's decision on Jan. 31 to grant only a two-month extension for their permission to stay in Pakistan for a total of 1.4 million registered Afghan refugees, citing security and economic threats the country is facing due to the refugees.

Islamabad's move has caused chaos among refugee families. Uncertainty and fear has gripped Afghan refugees as the 60-day deadline for refugee repatriation is approaching.

According to the Ministry of States and Frontier Regions (SAFRON) here, the country has been home to millions of Afghan refugees for the past 33 years. Despite the repatriation of approximately 3.7 million since 2002.

In addition, the government has registered 700,000 undocumented Afghans during a six-month campaign, which began last August, according to SAFRON.

Pakistan has extended the validity of Afghan refugees' stay permission at least seven times in the past, but the government here said that January's extension would be the last one.

"Pakistan's economy has carried the burden of hosting Afghan refugees for a long time and under the present circumstances cannot sustain it further," said a statement by the Pakistani federal cabinet last month.

Pakistan has commitments with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and the Afghan government that there would be no forced returns.

"We want Afghan refugees to return with dignity as soon as possible. No doubt volunteer repatriation is the focus, we all should take steps for creating favorable conditions for their return," Pakistani Foreign Ministry spokesperson Muhammad Faisal said in a recent briefing.

In fact, relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan have deteriorated in recent years and tension heightened after several terror attacks in both countries. Tension was further stoked as they accused each other's insurgents of carrying out the attacks.

On Saturday, Pakistani army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa said at the Munich Security Conference in Germany that Pakistan had been hosting 3 million Afghan refugees and now, the time had come to repatriate these refugees to their own country in order to defeat terrorism.

"It is the only way we can ensure that no one is misusing our hospitality and soil for mischief in Afghanistan," the army chief said.

Following a U.S. drone strike on Jan. 25 in the northwestern Pakistani district of Kurram, Pakistan's military said the target had been hiding in an Afghan refugee camp.

Mirvaiz Khan, an Afghan residing in Islamabad as a refugee, spent many sleepless nights due to Pakistan's decision to repatriate Afghan refugees.

"I run a well-settled food business under the name of Afghan cuisine in Islamabad, but I don't see any chance of my success in Afghanistan in the presence of terrorism. My family is a business community, we have no land, no other source of income in Afghanistan," Khan told Xinhua.

The conditions are so bleak in Afghanistan that many returnees are sneaking back across the porous border and quietly taking up their lives in Pakistan. In 2016, nearly 400,000 refugees returned to their homeland during a campaign by Pakistan. Last year, about 60,000 came back again, said a senior Pakistani government official.

Abdullah Khan, 60, came to Pakistan from Afghanistan when he was 15. After living for more than four decades in Peshawar, a northwestern city in Pakistan, he was repatriated with his wife and children in 2016 but came back a few months later.

"It was the most unpleasant experience in my life," Khan told Xinhua, adding that there were no doctors, no clinics, no clean water and no employment. Basically nothing in Afghanistan but bad roads with the constant fear of a brutal death at the hands of terrorists.

The elders of the refugees in Peshawar where most of the Afghan refugees are residing, also expressed discontentment at the "leaving order" and formed a committee to start a campaign to convince the government to review the deadline.

"The return of refugees is not possible until peace is restored in Afghanistan," said Malik Abdul Ghafar Shinwari, a senior member of the committee, adding that Pakistan must give three to five years' notice to the refugees as the situation in Afghanistan is not favorable for living a normal life.

The UNHCR in Pakistan is facilitating a voluntary repatriation program for Afghan refugees and pays 200 U.S. dollars to every refugee upon returning to Afghanistan. The voluntary return program has been suspended due to winter since October 2017 and will restart in March again, said government officials.

"It took 30 years of my life to reach a position where I can provide a shelter for my family and one of my sons is earning for us now, while the other is going to school. If we go back to Afghanistan, it will take another 30 years to build a house and get jobs," Azizi said.

The middle-aged eyes grew misty as he recalled his life in Pakistan. "Though life in Pakistan was not a bed of roses at least I always feel safe here, and my children have an opportunity to get quality education and healthcare," he explained.

[Editor: huaxia]
010020070750000000000000011100001369892331
彩神vl 大发app 凤凰彩票app 乐发iv游戏平台 凤凰彩票大厅 乐发彩票 乐发彩票app下载 大发彩票 乐发v官网 乐发lll 乐发lv入口 乐发iv首页 乐发ll登录 凤凰彩票大厅 乐发官网 乐发ii下载入口 乐发ll 乐发v平台 乐发v官网 乐发lll 乐发lv入口 乐发iv首页 乐发ll登录 乐发lv 乐发lll安装 乐发lv 乐发登录入口 乐发iv游戏平台 凤凰彩票登录 网信彩票 彩神 彩神彩票官方网站 彩神彩票官网首页 彩神官方app下载安卓版 凤凰彩票登录 彩神v3 凤凰彩票app下载 彩神官方app下载安卓版 网信快三 一分快3 快三彩票购彩平台 凤凰彩票官方 快3官网 网信彩票 快3app 网信彩票平台 百姓彩票平台 网信平台官网 快3app下载 百姓彩票 每日彩票 快3app 百姓彩票 每日彩票 快3app 百姓彩票平台 幸运5分彩快3 快3彩票app下载 百姓彩票网站网址 大发10分PK10 快3下载 网信彩票平台 网信平台官网 快3彩票官网app 凤凰彩票官方 彩神彩票 大发10分PK10 彩神v3 大发彩票app下载 百姓彩票网站网址 彩神购彩平台 每日彩票 官方正规快三彩票平台 彩神彩票购彩平台 百姓彩票 凤凰彩票购彩平台 凤凰彩票app下载 彩神官方app下载安卓版 网信快三 一分快3 快三彩票购彩平台 凤凰彩票官方 彩神彩票 大发10分PK10 彩神v3 凤凰彩票登录 乐发lv 乐发∨Il 百姓彩票网站网址 乐发彩票 乐发彩票官方网站 乐发lll安装 百姓彩票网站网址 凤凰彩票app下载 大发10分PK10 乐发2 乐发app 凤凰彩票 大发彩票app 乐发登录入口 乐发ll登录 乐发v官网 乐发官网 大发彩票app下载 凤凰彩票购彩平台 彩神彩票 官方正规快三彩票平台 一分快3 百姓彩票网站网址 凤凰彩票app下载 大发10分PK10 乐发2 乐发app 凤凰彩票 大发彩票app 乐发登录入口 乐发ll登录 乐发v官网 乐发官网 大发彩票app下载 凤凰彩票购彩平台 彩神彩票 官方正规快三彩票平台 1分快三平台 百姓彩票平台 凤凰彩票登录 幸运5分彩快3 彩神 乐发彩票 乐发 大发彩票 乐发iv游戏平台 乐发lv 乐发lll 乐发ii下载入口 乐发彩票官方网站 凤凰彩票官方网站 凤凰快3 彩神彩票官网首页 1分快三平台 百姓彩票平台 凤凰彩票登录 幸运5分彩快3 彩神 乐发彩票 乐发 大发彩票 乐发iv游戏平台 乐发lv 凤凰彩票app 乐发app 网信彩票平台 网信彩票平台 乐发iv游戏平台 凤凰彩票app 乐发lv 乐发彩票app下载 凤凰彩票app 网信彩票平台 乐发彩票app下载 乐发lv 乐发app 大发彩票安卓下载 大发彩票安卓下载 大发彩票 乐发彩票app下载 网信彩票平台 乐发iv游戏平台 彩神彩票 乐发彩票中心 极速快3彩票平台 人人快三凤凰 大发彩票app 大发彩票大全 乐发彩票 彩神彩票官方网站 乐发app 酷天堂彩票平台 凤凰彩票app下载 凤凰彩票大厅 凤凰彩票app 极速快3彩票平台 凤凰彩票 凤凰快3 乐发ll官网 乐发彩票中心 正规快三送彩金平台 凤凰彩票官方 乐发ll 乐发 网信彩票 彩神彩票 彩神彩票官方网站 大发彩票app 网信彩票用户 百姓快三 百姓彩票平台 乐发lv 乐发彩票app下载 彩信平台 网信彩票 乐发彩票官方网站 乐发∨Il 人人快三凤凰 凤凰彩票 凤凰快3 乐发ll官网 乐发彩票中心 正规快三送彩金平台 凤凰彩票官方 乐发ll 乐发 网信彩票 彩神彩票 彩神彩票官方网站 人人快三凤凰 乐发彩票 彩神彩票 乐发iv游戏平台 乐发彩票 大发彩票中心 凤凰彩票登录 凤凰彩票app 彩神彩票 大发彩票 乐发ll 大发彩票app 凤凰快3 凤凰彩票 彩神彩票 乐发ll 凤凰彩票 乐发lll 凤凰彩票大厅 网信彩票 彩神彩票 乐发lv 快盈彩票 乐发彩票官方网站 盈彩网投资平台 大发官网 一分时时彩 乐发lv 快3平台 凤凰快3 乐发ll 全民彩票 乐发彩票官方网站 百姓彩票 乐发彩票 大发彩票 极速快3 乐发app 大发官网 乐发lll 快3平台 凤凰快3 乐发ll 全民彩票 乐发彩票官方网站 百姓彩票 乐发彩票 大发彩票 极速快3 乐发app 彩神iv 大发彩票app 大小单双平台 一分pk10 乐发lv 快盈彩票 乐发官网 快彩彩票 百姓彩票 凤凰彩票大厅 网信彩票 乐发彩票中心 网信快3 乐发 彩神xl 三分快3 大发彩票 大发官网 乐发lll 快3平台 凤凰快3 乐发ll 全民彩票 乐发彩票官方网站 百姓彩票 乐发彩票 乐发彩票官方网站 大发彩票 乐发 分分快3 彩神vl 55世纪 55世纪 凤凰快3 乐发彩票 乐发lv welcome凤凰彩票 乐发ll 1分快3 彩神 彩神ll 1分快3官网 1分快3的平台 welcome凤凰彩票 三分快3 彩神x 彩神vl 凤凰彩票 彩神xl 大发彩票 凤凰彩票大厅 乐发官网 乐发ll 乐发lll 乐发lv 大发彩票app 大发彩票 乐发 乐发彩票 乐发彩票中心 凤凰快3 乐发彩票 彩神xl 腾讯快3 大发彩票 彩神xl 大发彩票 乐发彩票 大发彩票app 快3平台 乐发 1分快3 乐发彩票 彩神x 凤凰快3 彩神xl 彩吧助手 大发彩票app 快3平台 大发排列3 彩神iv 彩神vl 乐发IV 彩神x 一分pk10 大发排列3 乐发lv 快3彩票 乐发app下载 三分快3 快三平台助手 乐发彩票ll 彩神iv 乐发lll下载 盈彩网投资平台 乐发Ⅲ 一分pk10 凤凰彩票 乐发Vll 大发官网 乐发ll 大发彩票 乐发1 凤凰快3 彩神vl 乐发lx 百姓彩票 乐发VI 彩神x 乐发IV 极速快3 乐发 凤凰快3 网信快3 乐发lv 快3彩票 乐发app下载 三分快3 快三平台助手 乐发彩票ll 彩神iv 乐发lll下载 盈彩网投资平台 乐发Ⅲ 凤凰彩票大厅 乐发lv 乐发lv 乐发lv 凤凰彩票 大发彩票 大发彩票 凤凰彩票 乐发lv 凤凰彩票 凤凰彩票 乐发lv 乐发ll 凤凰彩票app下载 凤凰彩票 凤凰彩票 乐发lv 乐发ll 凤凰彩票app下载 凤凰彩票 凤凰彩票 乐发lv 彩神x 乐发 乐发ll 极速快3 乐发lv 乐发彩票中心 快3彩票 凤凰彩票大厅 彩神x 凤凰彩票app 分分快3 网信彩票 网盟彩票 凤凰彩票 百姓彩票 乐发 快彩彩票 乐发彩票 快3平台 百姓彩票 大小单双平台 凤凰快3 彩神xl 一分pk10 乐发lv 三分快3 大发彩票 乐发彩票 快3平台 百姓彩票 大小单双平台 凤凰快3 彩神xl 一分pk10 乐发lv 三分快3 大发彩票 极速快3 乐发ll 网信彩票 乐发lv 全民彩票 凤凰彩票app下载 快盈彩票 大发彩票app 大发官网 凤凰彩票 彩神iv 大发彩票 网信快3 凤凰彩票 百姓彩票