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UN tries to strike deal with Pakistan to safeguard two million Afghans

Dance

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Jul 20, 2010
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Pakistan has repeatedly said it expects them to have left by the end of 2012 but with no end in sight to the bitter conflict ravaging Afghanistan UN officials are in Islamabad this week to find a deal.
An international conference has been called for May to present a new long-term strategy amid concerns that a decade of misguided policy has failed to help families returning home.
At the same time, Pakistani ministers have expressed concern at the economic and social burden they have been expected to bear and are agitating for speedier returns.
António Guterres, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, on Wednesday told The Daily Telegraph the group was in talks with the Pakistan government to ensure refugees could stay beyond 2012 and to speed up programmes of voluntary repatriation.
"What matters now is what is guaranteed and what is guaranteed is that there won't be any policy of involuntary expulsion of refugees," he said.
"And we have agreed with them to do our best to enhance the programme of voluntary repatriation." Afghans have sought safety in Pakistan ever since the Soviet invasion in 1979.
Pakistan hosts the world's biggest population of refugees. Some 1.7 million are registered as refugees with thousands more living under the radar.
However, Pakistan's weak economic record and widespread armed insurgencies have meant Afghans have regularly been made scapegoats for the country's ills.
Rehman Malik, the country's interior minister, has repeatedly accused the refugee population of being a source of terrorism.
With the conflict in Afghanistan showing no signs of easing and with international forces withdrawing in 2014, the numbers of refugees returning are on the wane.
In December, the UNHCR's Afghanistan representative admitted that its strategy in the war-wracked country was "the biggest mistake UNHCR ever made".
"It was concentrated on support to families returning," said Mr Guterres.
"And this was not the most important factor. The most important factor was whether the conditions on the ground were there to be sustainable and successful." He said a new policy – concentrating on giving support to communities to which families where returning – had been agreed with Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran, and would be presented to donors in May.

UN tries to strike deal with Pakistan to safeguard two million Afghan refugees - Telegraph
 
Every Afghan must be kicked out of Pakistan! Pakistan isn't some orphanage that will shelter over 2 million Afghans just so they can continue being ungrateful to us.
 
Every Afghan must be kicked out of Pakistan! Pakistan isn't some orphanage that will shelter over 2 million Afghans just so they can continue being ungrateful to us.

They should be sent be back and the only ones who actually contribute something to Pakistan/or give up afghan nationality and adopt Pakistani citizenship should be allowed to stay.
 
u.s. (in u.n. clothes this time) will find ever more ways to force pakistan to bear the high costs of a u.s. war. and of course, american history book will one day read that americans are the glorious warriors who fought terrorism and pakistan an obstacle
 
i know a Afghan family. Their "tents" use to be infront of my old house. After the war they went back. NATO gave them some money on the border so that they may start a new life in Afghanistan. But they came back to Pakistan on that same truck.


There is no reason we should keep them here. OK they are human and we tried to help them but they are not helping us.
 

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