31 May
2002
Media Relations
This
is a summary of what was said by the UNHCR spokesperson at today’s Palais
des Nations press briefing in Geneva.
Afghan refugee returns
More than 815,000 refugees have returned to
Afghanistan since UNHCR and the Afghan Interim Authority began assisting
refugees homewards on 1 March.
This is now the largest and fastest
repatriation that we've seen since some 800,000 refugees returned to Kosovo in
mid‑1999. The pace of the return has exceeded expectations and strained
aid agency resources, as well as Afghanistan's absorption capacity.
Inside Afghanistan, the situation remains
critical. Returning refugees and the internally displaced have extremely high
expectations. The international community must work to meet the shelter, water,
food, health care and education needs. We are talking about the most basic
needs that have for so long gone unmet inside Afghanistan.
We have so far received $179 million out of
the $271 million we requested for the 15 month period ending this year to
assist Afghans to return and to care for some 3.5 million refugees in the
region. Right now, we only have funding until the end of June.
Due to the scale of the assisted return
movement ‑‑ we had only planned to help 800,000 refugees home this
year, plus another 400,000 internally displaced persons to return ‑‑
UNHCR is now reviewing our planning and budget figures, and we may have to
appeal for even more money.
If fresh contributions do not arrive, we
may have to make some very hard choices, such as cutting travel grants for
returning refugees altogether, or to drastically reduce basic housing and water
projects.
IOM's indefinite suspension of its
transport programs for Afghans returning from Iran means that we're taking on
new costs, and we've introduced a system of cash grants to assist those Afghans
homewards. Already more than 60,000 Afghans have repatriated from Iran, out of
400,000 planned.
Some of the more than 815,000 returning
Afghans are already not getting all the supplies they need. In Jalalabad, Kabul
and Herat, returning Afghans receive only 50 kilograms of wheat, rather than
the standard WFP three month ration of 150 kgs. Stocks of our family kits are
running so low at our main Jalalabad center that we've had to issue people with
redeemable coupons so that they can collect items like blankets, tarpaulins,
jerry cans and other useful items once they are delivered. In Herat, Kabul and
Kandahar, we've had to substitute items while we await fresh supplies.