The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Afghan-Pak border closing leaves families separated

- By Pamela Constable

SORKHA KHAN, Afghanista­n: The land is lush in this river-fed region of eastern Afghanista­n. The highway that leads to the Pakistani border, 60 miles away, passes fields of ripening wheat, cucumber and cauliflowe­r. The nearby city of Jalalabad is bustling, with crowded sidewalks and traffic jams of produce trucks, auto rickshaws and tractors.

But for a large, nearly invisible populace of new arrivals, the welcome has been grudging, the work scarce and the terrain as barren as the moon.

They are natives of the region, but they have been away for years, living as undocument­ed war refugees in Pakistan. About 260,000 such returnees have arrived in the past 15 months, pushed out by Pakistani authoritie­s and encouraged to return by the Afghan government, but lacking official status in either country.

In many ways, they are misfits and intruders in their homeland - nomads allocated bits of rocky ground to pitch tents and build cinder-block huts; surplus labourers in a market crowded with men who have fled insurgent fighting nearby; half-forgotten relatives trying to squeeze back into villages where no one has room to take them in.

“There is nothing here but dust,” said Hakim Khan, 55, a labourer and father of 10, standing on a stony hillside where the government said about 700 returnee families could settle at no cost. After seven months, most have gotten only as far as marking their plots with cinderbloc­k walls, partly because of a dispute over who owns the land.

Meanwhile, they are camping in makeshift shelters, fashioned from bits of plastic and cloth and covered with sheets of tin. There is no electricit­y, and the only water source for 4,000 people is a single well. There is a oneroom schoolhous­e, but few of the children attend.

Inside Khan’s tent one recent morning, three cots were jammed together next to a gas burner and a stack of pots. Children ran in and out, chasing chickens. His wife, hiding behind a curtain, was asked to name her most valuable possession. “There is nothing valuable enough to mention,” she answered.

Most of these returnees never registered with the Pakistani government, which meant they were not entitled to cash payments and other forms of assistance by the United Nations’ refugee agency when Pakistani officials began pushing out more than two million long-term refugees two years ago.

Many others with official refugee status continued on to Kabul, the capital, where services and work opportunit­ies are greater. But these undocument­ed families - mostly poor and uneducated, with few connection­s - have stayed behind, hoping to find a niche in their geographic and ethnic Pashtun homeland.

At the moment, the official border crossing at Torkham is closed, a punitive measure taken by Pakistan last month after a string of terrorist bombings there were linked to militias based on the Afghan side. The flood of returnees slowed to a trickle this winter, although U.N. officials expect it will resume when spring comes and the border reopens.

Meanwhile, those who arrived last year, piling their possession­s in rented trucks, have tentativel­y settled in a variety of camps, communitie­s and government allocated tracts. Their only substantiv­e aid comes from the non-profit Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration, which provides shelter and basic supplies for the first few weeks, plus transporta­tion to their destinatio­n.

“We are there when they arrive at the border, but what happens after that is a different issue,” said Matthew Graydon, a spokesman for the organisati­on here.

One major problem is securing property rights. Most arable or habitable terrain is already claimed, and some arriving groups who attempted to reclaim family land have found that others had acquired it and expected them to pay. In the village of Karokhel, 500 families came back last summer, planning to put up homes, and instead became embroiled in a nasty fight.

“This is our ancestors’ land, and we kissed the stones when we arrived. But now it feels like a prison,” said Hajji Mahmad Jan, 65, who left Karokhel 40 years ago. Most families are living in tents, with wheat sheaves for fences, while the legal wrangle continues. “Just to fetch a bucket of water from the spring, we have to pay 50 cents,” he complained.

Another shock is the scarcity of jobs, with the national unemployme­nt rate at 40 per cent. Early each day, returnees crowd street corners in Jalalabad, hoping for temporary work hauling bricks or loading trucks. One recent morning, several glum men said they had waited for weeks without snagging a single job. One became so desperate that he spent months in a distant migrant camp, picking grapes for US$5 (RM22.50) a day.

Returnees also face job competitio­n from villagers displaced by the insurgent conflict. Some have fled fighting between Taliban and government forces; others have escaped districts controlled by more violent Islamic State-linked militias. Jalalabad is relatively safe, with security forces guarding and patrolling the roads, so the jobless population has swelled.

The luckiest newcomers, others say, are those with relatives and communitie­s to welcome them back. But they too may be struggling to get by. If a longabsent uncle suddenly reappears with an extended family of 20, Pashtun tradition demands that they all be accommodat­ed, but resentment can fester and disputes flare.

In one farming village north of Jalalabad, bordering the Kunar River, five local families returned from Pakistan last fall. There was no space for them, and tensions soon erupted. Two brothers in their 30s, one an engineer and the other a business owner in Pakistan, found themselves jobless and living with their families in dark, mud-walled rooms that opened onto a yard for sheep and goats.

“For the first few nights, my children kept asking why we didn’t turn on the lights,” the businessma­n, Nanjialai Khan, said bitterly. The engineer, Rafiullah, confessed that he could not bear the idea of working as a farm labourer. “People here work hard. They use shovels,” he said, making a digging gesture and then showing his palms. “It is difficult when you have had a softer life.”

Another man from the same family said he had no choice but to pitch a tent in the yard of a relative with whom he had a personal grievance going back years. He seemed distraught and said he was unable to sleep.

“Here we have to live with our enemies, but we have nowhere else to go,” said the man, speaking in a whisper. He said he did not remember the village, and that his earliest memory was of fleeing across the border as a tiny child after Soviet forces attacked Afghanista­n. “This is my country,” he said, “but I cannot see the future at all.” — Washington Post

We are there when they arrive at the border, but what happens after that is a different issue. – Matthew Graydon of Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration

 ?? — The Washington Post photos by Andrew Quilty ?? Men gather on a main street in Jalalabad, hoping to find a scarce job paying US$8 (RM36) a day.
— The Washington Post photos by Andrew Quilty Men gather on a main street in Jalalabad, hoping to find a scarce job paying US$8 (RM36) a day.
 ??  ?? Boys play a vehicle at Karokhel, a settlement of about 500 families forced to leave their long-time homes in Pakistan. The families said they have ancestral rights to land in Karokhel, but the Afghan government disputes the claim.
Boys play a vehicle at Karokhel, a settlement of about 500 families forced to leave their long-time homes in Pakistan. The families said they have ancestral rights to land in Karokhel, but the Afghan government disputes the claim.
 ??  ?? A girl washes her hands beside the shelter her family lives in on the rocky slope of Sorkha Khan, Afghanista­n. The nearest drinking water is several miles away.
A girl washes her hands beside the shelter her family lives in on the rocky slope of Sorkha Khan, Afghanista­n. The nearest drinking water is several miles away.
 ??  ?? A woman holds her child in Shiga, in eastern Afghanista­n. Members of five families there had lived as unregister­ed refugees near Peshawar, Pakistan, for 30 years.
A woman holds her child in Shiga, in eastern Afghanista­n. Members of five families there had lived as unregister­ed refugees near Peshawar, Pakistan, for 30 years.

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