On World Refugee Day, displaced Afghans in Pakistan fear starvation amid pandemic

Special On World Refugee Day, displaced Afghans in Pakistan fear starvation amid pandemic
In this Thursday, Feb. 13, 2020 photo, Afghan refugee Hukam Khan narrates the situation of his country, at Kabobayan refugee camp, in Peshawar, Pakistan. (AP)
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Updated 21 June 2020
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On World Refugee Day, displaced Afghans in Pakistan fear starvation amid pandemic

On World Refugee Day, displaced Afghans in Pakistan fear starvation amid pandemic
  • COVID-19 has made Afghan refugees’ concerns much more immediate, like hunger and the threat of starvation
  • Pakistan is the world’s third largest refugee host

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Afghan refugees on Saturday said the pandemic had pushed them to the brink of starvation as economic activities and mobility grinds to a snail’s pace during the coronavirus outbreak sweeping the country.
June 20, internationally observed every year as World Refugee Day, is a tribute to the millions of people uprooted from their countries as a result of conflict, war and natural disasters.
Pakistan is the third largest refugee-hosting country in the world after Turkey and Colombia and hosts 1.4 million registered refugees from neighboring war-torn Afghanistan. The actual number of Afghan refugees in Pakistan is considered to be much higher, around the 2.5 million mark.
“We are deprived of basic necessities like gas, clean drinking water, health and education facilities, but this year we are also facing starvation due to closure of economic activities,” Rahimullah Khan, an Afghan refugee at a camp along the outskirts of Karachi, told Arab News.
Pakistan is in the throes of a health care crisis, with roughly 175,000 cases of coronavirus confirmed by Saturday and nearly 3,400 reportedly dead from the disease. The figures are mounting daily, leading the government to enforce partial lockdowns and restrictions on movement and assembly.
According to spokesperson for UNHCR Pakistan, Qaiser Afridi, his organization is collaborating with federal and provincial governments, the WHO, NGOs and other UN agencies to ensure Afghan refugees are included in Pakistan’s COVID-19 national preparedness and response plans-- including cash support programs.
But refugees in the country tell stories of destitution and poverty, unable to get access to even the most basic facilities. These days, hunger is their most urgent concern.
“We need immediate food support,” Syed Mustafa, a teacher at Jamaliddin Afghani school at Karachi’s Sohrab Goth, told Arab News.
Most refugees at Jalala and Karachi camps across the length of the country, said they had yet to receive any help.
Additionally, the refugee repatriation process was put on hold following the coronavirus outbreak, UNHCR’s Afridi said.
“We are negotiating a long term stay for refugees as the conditions in Afghanistan are not conducive for their return,” he said.
There are other challenges, Afridi added, of law, order and livelihood.
“As long as the refugees remain here, the world community should support both Pakistan and the refugees as well as concentrate on targeted development assistance in Afghanistan which may pave the way for their sustainable return.”
He added the UNHCR had distributed medical supplies, personal protective equipment, sanitation products and other relief items to rural health facilities in support of refugees.
These included a one time Rs12,000 cash assistance program for the most vulnerable refugee families impacted by the COVID-19 outbreak, he said.
“In 2020, we are using wood for cooking meals in the outskirts of the one of the world’s largest cities,” refugee Rahimullah Khan said.
”We have no underground drainage system, no drinking water, no schools and health centers, which are the basic needs of every human being,” he said.
After a pause, he added: “Good things have happened too. Pakistan has allowed us to open bank accounts.”
“My children don’t know the Independence Day of Afghanistan, but every year on August 14, they purchase Pakistani flags,” Khan continued.
“As we demand basic rights, we also appreciate the hospitality of this country.”
In 2018, then newly elected Prime Minister Imran Khan vowed he would grant citizenship to Afghan refugees who were born and had lived in the country for several decades. But in Pakistan’s refugee camps, the pipe dream of citizenship rights remains a distant promise.
On Saturday, the UNHCR representative in Pakistan, Ms. Noriko Yoshida, said the mounting figures of refugee populations were increasingly worrying.
“Behind every statistic are people and their personal journeys. Now, 1 in every 97 people in this world are displaced, representing more than 1 percent of humanity,” she added.
“Another fact is that 85 percent of refugees are in developing countries, despite their own challenges,” she said, and lauded the people and government of Pakistan for hosting refugees for over four decades.
“Pakistan’s hospitality and generosity are exemplary,” she said.