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SLUG: 2-307691 Afghan/Refugees (L)
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=09/19/2003

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=PAKISTAN/AFGHAN REFUGEES (L-O)

NUMBER=2-307691

BYLINE=AYAZ GUL

DATELINE=ISLAMABAD

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

INTRO: The United Nations refugee agency says, under its voluntary repatriation program, nearly 500-thousand Afghans have returned to their homeland this year from neighboring Pakistan and Iran. Ayaz Gul reports from Islamabad.

TEXT: International efforts to establish peace and rebuild war-ravaged Afghanistan have encouraged more than two-point-two-million Afghan refugees to return home during the past two years. Most of them came back from refugee camps in neighboring Pakistan.

After the fall of the Taleban regime in late 2001, the United Nations created a program to help returning Afghans, giving them travel grants, food and other items to re-establish a household. The United Nations is also re-building about 60-thousand homes.

The U-N program is a dramatic success. Last year, it helped one-point-five million Afghans return - from Pakistan alone.

This year's number looks low by comparison, but U-N officials say this is not unusual. Jack Redden is the spokesman for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, or U-N-H-C-R, in Pakistan.

/// REDDEN ACT ///

Three-hundred-thousand (from Pakistan) is really quite an exceptional number. The reason it does not look so impressive is just that we had this phenomenal return last year of one-point-five-million, and that was the largest that U-N-H-C-R had seen in more than 30 years. So, last year was very abnormal.

/// END ACT ///

/// OPT ///

As winter in Afghanistan approaches, U-N officials say the number of refugees returning is expected to decline. Mr. Redden adds that weather is more important than violence in terms of repatriation.

/// REDDEN ACT ///

. We are now heading into winter, so the numbers of course are going down. . So, it does not seem to have been affected by the reports of violence in certain parts of the country.

/// END ACT ///

/// END OPT ///

Because of the long and porous border between Afghanistan and Pakistan, a small percentage of the refugees went back to Pakistan after receiving U-N assistance, only to return to Afghanistan. To deter that, the U-N aid agency is now using eye-scan machines on refugees getting U-N assistance. The machine can detect someone who has been tested before. Mr. Redden says this has cut down on abuses.

/// REDDEN ACT ///

I think it has been extremely effective.. We have detected almost none who have tried to go through a second time. We knew that last year, some people . obviously slipped through a second time. So, this has cut out anybody who was not legitimate. .

/// END ACT ///

U-N officials say an estimated one-million Afghans are still living in camps in Pakistan, while an unknown but substantial number are living in cities.

In the 23 years of war before the fall of the Taleban regime nearly two years ago, up to five-million Afghans fled into exile, most of them to Pakistan and Iran. (SIGNED)

NEB/HK/AG/MH/TW/FC



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