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UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador Angelina Jolie speaks through an interpreter to a returnee woman in Nangarhar province during her first visit to Afghanistan.
© Getty Images photographer Marco Di Lauro
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2008-09-15
Angelina Jolie ends Afghan visit with call for more returnee support
KABUL, Afghanistan, October 24 (UNHCR) – The
UN refugee agency's Goodwill Ambassador Angelina Jolie has concluded her
first visit to Afghanistan, where she saw both the successes and the difficulties
of return and reintegration. She saw first hand the country's difficult
humanitarian circumstances and called for more international support to
meet critical needs during the coming winter.
Jolie's two-day trip comes ahead of an international conference on return
and reintegration to be held in Kabul next month. Co-hosted by Afghanistan's
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and UNHCR, the event will bring government
ministries and donors together to see how the country's absorption capacity
can best be strengthened to support further repatriation.
The award-winning American actress is familiar with UNHCR's Afghan operation,
having twice visited Pakistan in recent years to see Afghan refugees there.
But the visit on Wednesday and Thursday was her first to Afghanistan to
see the reintegration challenges inside the country.
"The courage, resilience and quiet dignity of returnee families rebuilding
their lives against the kind of adversity few of us can imagine shows the
human spirit at its best," Jolie said after visiting a number of sites.
On Wednesday, Jolie travelled to Nangarhar province in eastern Afghanistan
where almost 850,000, or 20 percent, of all returnees to Afghanistan have
repatriated since 2002. Such numbers have placed huge pressures on the
limited land availability in one of Afghanistan's most densely populated
provinces.
The Goodwill Ambassador visited the Lower Sheikh Mesri settlement site,
where some 1,400 returnee families have been living in makeshift shelters
and tattered tents. The site's residents outlined the difficulties of finding
employment and the limited access to basic social services such as health
and education.
Jolie also witnessed the problems encountered by returnees following the
summer closure of Jalozai refugee village in Pakistan's North West Frontier
Province. More than 750 families originating from the adjacent Afghan province
of Kunar are living on barren land in northern Nangarhar. They have been
unable to return to their homes due to insecurity, land disputes and lack
of economic opportunities.
"In some ways we were better off in Pakistan. Life is very difficult
here. But it means everything to me today to live among my people in my
home country despite these problems," said an elderly returnee, Hashim
Khan.
On Thursday, Jolie saw similar issues of landlessness and poverty among
returnees and internally displaced people (IDP) living in poor housing
conditions in Kabul. The Afghan capital's population has increased threefold
since 2001 to an estimated 4.5 million. Refugees and IDPs account for approximately
30 percent of this increase. They compete for jobs with other city inhabitants
and the many rural migrants who have come to Kabul in search of economic
opportunities.
On her Kabul field trip, the actress visited a site of 18 returnee families
who have been squatting in public buildings for several years, unable to
return and settle in their province of origin because of poverty.
More than 5 million Afghans have returned home since the fall of the Taliban
regime in late 2001, over 4.2 million of them with UNHCR's assistance.
But the growing incidence of homelessness is a clear sign that the return
of the remaining 3 million registered Afghans still in exile in Pakistan
and Iran will be a sharper challenge.
Whilst returnees have contributed significantly to the economy with capital
and skills acquired abroad, the huge numbers have stretched the capacities
of the Afghan authorities. "Afghanistan has been struggling to absorb
these massive returns. It's understandable. It's one of the largest population
movements in recent history," said Jolie, as she wrapped up her visit
on Thursday.
Noting that the long-term commitment of the international community will
be critical to the country's recovery and the prospects for future repatriation,
the actress also stressed the need for an increase in humanitarian assistance
to the population ahead of the coming winter.
The November conference in Kabul aims to build agreement on how return
and reintegration can be sustained by increased bilateral, regional, and
international cooperation. Traditionally, refugees are assisted by humanitarian
aid budgets. But these have limited impact on sustainable reintegration.
So an important objective will be to advance the incorporation of return
and reintegration issues more systematically into the planning and budgeting
of national development programmes in key areas and sectors.
By Mohammad Nader Farhad
in Kabul, Afghanistan
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