Los Angeles Times

Pakistani-born Afghans find nowhere is home

Refugees are shipped to Afghanista­n, unfamiliar and torn by violence. Most flee, unwanted in any land.

- By Umar Farooq

ISTANBUL, Turkey — This year Rehmat was deported to a country he had never known. Weary of hiding from authoritie­s after living in Turkey illegally for more than two years, he turned himself in to police and was shipped off to Afghanista­n.

When he landed at the airport in Kabul, a long-lost uncle greeted him. “We had never seen each other before, but he knew I was coming,” Rehmat said. “He was holding up a sign with my name on it.”

Rehmat, 22, was born and raised in Pakistan. So was his father. Still, neither is considered a citizen under Pakistani law, and their stateless status reflects the extraordin­ary challenges faced by Afghan refugees the world over. When it came time to deport Rehmat from Turkey, Pakistan would not accept him and he was sent to Afghanista­n.

After he arrived in Kabul, Rehmat was at first happy to see a part of his family he had never met. But it wasn’t long before he was reminded of why so many people want to leave Afghanista­n. The night of Jan. 20, not long after Rehmat’s arrival, Taliban militants attacked the Interconti­nental Hotel, killing 22 people, including foreign nationals. Rehmat was staying with his uncle, whose home was a five-minute walk from the hotel.

“We heard the attack happening around midnight, and everyone in the neighborho­od ran out of

their homes,” said Rehmat, reached by phone in Kabul. “We spent maybe 12 hours on the streets — I thank God I got out of there alive. My heart has gone stone cold from this life. It’s like there is nowhere for me to go.”

Seven out of 10 Afghan refugees who return home are forced to flee again because of violence, a new survey by the Norwegian Refugee Council and the Internal Displaceme­nt Monitoring Center found, echoing reports by human rights groups that are asking the European Union to stop returning the refugees to a country that is still in the throes of war.

According to a United Nations tally, 3,538 Afghans were killed and 7,015 injured in 2017, down 9% from 2016, which was the deadliest such period for Afghan civilians since 2009.

As violence in Afghanista­n picks up, many Afghans are looking for a way out of the country, but have few options left. Rehmat asked that his full name not be used because he intends to flee to Europe once more.

At least 2 million Afghans live in neighborin­g Pakistan, but even those born there have little legal protection. An estimated 1.4 million of those Afghans are registered with the government as refugees, and Pakistan has given them until June 30 to leave the country. The government has set such deadlines before — only to extend them — but it’s unclear whether it will grant yet another extension.

Pakistani officials increasing­ly blame the Afghan refugees for terrorist attacks in the country. “Pakistan says Afghans are terrorists. I have lots of friends who are harassed by police,” Rehmat said. “They leave the country to go back to Afghanista­n, even if it’s a place that’s more dangerous. Or some, if they have money, try to go to Europe.”

Unsure when Pakistani authoritie­s might order Afghans to leave, Rehmat quit his university in Islamabad, where he studied Islamic theology, and headed for Europe in 2016. His family borrowed $1,500 to pay a smuggler who helped him cross into Iran, then into Turkey.

Like many other Afghans, Rehmat hoped to apply for asylum upon reaching Europe, but the journey grew increasing­ly expensive and perilous.

One day the smuggler ordered Rehmat and the group he was traveling with to discard anything that could identify them and make it easier for police to deport them. So Rehmat threw away the only such document he had, a “proof of registrati­on” card he and the other Afghan refugees registered with the U.N. are given by the Pakistani government.

The only thing he kept to remind him of home, he said, is a steel locket in the shape of Afghanista­n, which he keeps around his neck at all times.

“People sometimes leave everything on their way here,” he said. “You never know when you are going to die. I keep this so at least they would know, if something happens, this guy is Afghan.”

In Istanbul, Rehmat found a job in a textile factory. After two months of work, though, he realized his Turkish boss was never going to pay him the salary he kept promising, and he quit. He tried twice to cross the border into Europe, paying smugglers thousands of dollars to be guided through forests into Bulgaria and Greece, but each time he was caught and sent back to Turkey.

In Istanbul’s Vefa district, not far from the iconic Blue Mosque, Rehmat joined hundreds of other Afghan refugees who worked in the recycling industry. Day and night, they made their way through the narrow warrens of the city, piling up cardboard, glass and plastic in giant burlap sacks they carted on a trolley. When it was filled, they returned to Vefa to have it weighed and sold to a Turkish middleman.

Around 330 pounds — a typical haul from a single run — pays about $13. Rehmat slowly collected a circle of distant relatives, some like him who had come from Pakistan, and others who had fled the war in Laghman, their family’s home province in Afghanista­n.

They brought with them stories of how dangerous life had become in Afghanista­n. Qismatulla­h, Rehmat’s cousin, entered Turkey from Afghanista­n, via Pakistan and Iran, a year ago. It was his second trip west. He had lived in Norway for 12 years after entering illegally and was deported back to Afghanista­n in 2015.

In Istanbul, he found his cousin Rehmat and the other Afghans were living a precarious life. Since Turkey signed a deal with the European Union in 2015 to halt the flow of migrants and refugees to Europe, Turkish authoritie­s have made it increasing­ly difficult for the few Afghan men who still live in Vefa.

Each day, bulldozers demolish the abandoned buildings they live in, and the recycling business, once employing hundreds of migrants who worked directly with Turkish buyers, has gone bust.

Rehmat, Qismatulla­h found, lived in a three-story building whose walls had partially collapsed, replaced with heavy carpets the men scavenged from the trash.

The Afghans are increasing­ly unwelcome in a country that hosts more than 3 million Syrian refugees.

“We cannot go to the hospital, we cannot go out at night anymore because we get mugged or stabbed by angry locals,” Rehmat said in an interview before he was ejected from Turkey. “We live a life of fear here.”

Turkey does not grant refugee status to Afghans, but it does allow them to register for government protection and residency until they can be resettled in other countries. According to the United Nations, 157,000 Afghans are so registered. But because resettleme­nt often takes years, most Afghans don’t register and instead hope to cross into Europe.

As Turkey works to cut such illegal migration, it has stepped up detentions of migrants, including Afghans, 44,127 of whom were detained in 2017.

Many no longer wait for the detention, deciding on voluntary deportatio­n instead. Rehmat, weary of hiding, decided to turn himself in after he barely escaped a police raid one afternoon in December. Plaincloth­es officers arrived and told the Afghans to gather in one room.

“They said, ‘We have some food for you,’ so of course all of us came,” Rehmat said. A dozen Afghan men gathered in the room, not thinking anything was amiss until the police brought out handcuffs.

“I don’t know what happened — maybe they didn’t have enough handcuffs or something — but when they were moving everyone into a van, one of the policemen told us to get the hell out, so we just ran,” said Rehmat, who escaped with Qismatulla­h.

Nine of the men detained that day were deported within a week. Each signed a document saying they were “voluntaril­y returning” to Afghanista­n, a practice Amnesty Internatio­nal has said is often illegal, because the detainees are usually not given legal representa­tion that would help them file for a stay based on danger faced back home.

Rehmat now plans to return to Turkey, but first he will head to Pakistan to see his ailing father. For decades, Pakistan allowed Afghans to travel without a visa across the border, but not now.

After weeks of waiting and paying hundreds of dollars in bribes, Rehmat got a six-month visa for Pakistan.

“I just want to see my father and my siblings for a bit, and I plan to leave again,” Rehmat said. “Afghanista­n, I cannot go there, and there is no certain future for us here in Pakistan. I have to try to go to Europe again.”

 ?? Ghulamulla­h Habibi EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? AN AFGHAN refugee, with child, is frisked as she crosses into Afghanista­n from Pakistan. An estimated 1.4 million Afghans registered as refugees in Pakistan have been ordered to leave the country by June 30.
Ghulamulla­h Habibi EPA/Shuttersto­ck AN AFGHAN refugee, with child, is frisked as she crosses into Afghanista­n from Pakistan. An estimated 1.4 million Afghans registered as refugees in Pakistan have been ordered to leave the country by June 30.
 ?? Emma Loy Internatio­nal Reporting Program ?? BORN IN Pakistan, Afghan refugee Rehmat wears a necklace as a reminder of his ancestral homeland.
Emma Loy Internatio­nal Reporting Program BORN IN Pakistan, Afghan refugee Rehmat wears a necklace as a reminder of his ancestral homeland.

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