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February 13, 2009

 

Overview

 

At least 38 killed in insurgency-related violence across Afghanistan
At least 38 people were killed in separate security incidents across Afghanistan this week.  In the latest violence, at least 26 people were killed and dozens wounded in a series of coordinated attacks on government buildings in the Afghan capital, Kabul, on Wednesday (February 11).  According to the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), militants attacked the ministries of justice, education and finance in Kabul and a prison near Khair Khana district, north of Kabul, CNN reported. Citing local health officials, CNN reported that some 54 people were wounded in the latest attacks. A Taliban spokesperson reportedly claimed responsibility for the attacks, saying they were retaliation for the government's execution of Taliban prisoners last year. On Tuesday (February 10), two soldiers from NATO-led forces were reportedly killed in eastern Afghanistan when a roadside bomb struck a NATO convoy in Khost province.  On Sunday (February 8), two US-led coalition soldiers and three Afghans, including two police officers, were killed in southern Helmand province when a bomb went off as soldiers attempted to defuse it, CNN reported. In another incident, US-led coalition forces shot and killed an Afghan civilian and wounded two others, including a woman and a child, when their vehicle failed to stop at a checkpoint in Khost on February 6. On the same day, Taliban insurgents attacked a hotel on a main highway linking Kabul and Jalalabad, killing a district police chief and his bodyguard, Reuters reported. Also on February 6, unidentified gunmen killed the head of a provincial council, a provincial official told reporters. Ahmad Zia Abdulzai, a spokesman for the provincial governor, said that a roadside bomb in Nangarhar also killed the chief of Bati Kot district.

 

US report says thousands of weapons unaccounted for in Afghanistan
A new report by the US government says that thousands of weapons sent to Afghanistan have gone missing, leading to fears that they have or may end up in the hands of the Taliban or al-Qaeda. According to a 46-page report by the US Government Accountability Office (GAO), the Pentagon has failed to keep track of an estimated 87,000, or more than one-third, of some 242,000 weapons given to Afghan security troops between December 2004 and June 2008, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported. According to CNN, the Defense Department spent approximately US$120 million during that time period to acquire small arms and light weapons for Afghan security troops. The report also said that there had been no monitoring of a further 135,000 weapons donated by NATO allies to Afghan security troops, AFP reported. According to the report, the military failed to record the serial numbers of some 46,000 weapons, according to the BBC. The serial numbers of some 41,000 weapons were recorded, but the military did not know their location, the BBC attributed the report as stating. The report said that under-staffed military officials failed to record serial numbers or conduct inventories. "Lapses in accountability occurred throughout the supply chain. This was primarily due to a lack of clear direction from Defense and staffing shortages," AFP quoted the report as saying.

 

US special envoy Holbrooke in Afghanistan to assess security
US President Barack Obama's special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Richard Holbrooke, arrived in the Afghan capital, Kabul, on Friday (February 13) on a two-day visit. Holbrooke, who is on a regional tour, arrived in Kabul after a four-day visit to Pakistan. During his visit he is scheduled to hold talks with the Afghan President Hamid Karzai and other key Afghan and NATO officials in the country. He is also expected to visit India before returning to the US. Before departing for his trip Holbrooke had said Afghanistan would be a much tougher challenge than Iraq. Holbrooke has said that he is on a "listen and learn" tour of the region, the BBC reported. He has not said much publicly during his tour. Security in Kabul was tight following Wednesday's simultaneous attacks on the country's justice, education and finance ministries and a prison north of the capital that left at least 26 people dead and dozens wounded. Holbrooke, best known for his role in the Dayton Peace Accords that ended the Bosnian war, has relatively limited exposure to South Asian politics. He will share his initial assessment with Obama and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton upon his return.

 

Russia agrees to transit of US cargo to Afghanistan
Russia has agreed to allow the transit of US cargo destined for Afghanistan. Robert Wood, a spokesperson for the US State Department, told reporters on Thursday (February 12), that a US team led by Deputy Assistant Secretary Patrick Moon held talks with Russian officials earlier this week (February 10-11) on wide-ranging issues concerning Afghanistan, including a transit agreement supported by Moscow, the Associated Press (AP) reported. Wood told reporters that the agreement allows the transport of non-lethal supplies to the NATO-led ISAF in Afghanistan. The agreement comes after Kyrgyzstan last week announced its plans to close down the Manas base used by US forces as an alternate supply route to Afghanistan. With the new supply route, it is now expected that supplies will first be transported to Russia and then transported via Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan to Afghanistan.


Movement

 

2008: The UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) held a press conference in Kabul on Monday (December-15). Nilab Mobarez from the UNAMA Spokesperson’s Office reported that the Afghan Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation and UNHCR just published the first national IDP profiling report. Findings of the report include that the various conflicts and natural disasters in Afghanistan in the last decade have uprooted about 1.2 million people. Currently, about 235,000 people are estimated to be displaced within Afghanistan. According to the report, aid agencies and the Afghan government must focus on local integration to help bring long-term displacement to an end. (UNAMA, December-15)

According to UNHCR, fewer Afghan refugees are returning home, while more people are leaving the country for better jobs and security, a trend that may increase regional tension. More than 5 million of 8 million Afghan refugees have returned home since 2002, but the number of those returning is falling, according to UNHCR. Amid pressure from Iran and Pakistan to send home millions of refugees, representatives from UNHCR, about 30 countries and international organizations met in Kabul in mid-November to mobilize support for the sustained return and reintegration of the refugees. (AFP, BBC, Nov-19)

UNHCR said in the first week of October that some 251,800 registered Afghan refugees in Pakistan and Iran had returned to their homes so far in 2008. Most of those repatriated (248,951) under the UN-assisted voluntary repatriation campaign came from Pakistan, while Iran accounted for 2,929 returns. (UNHCR, Oct-7)

Some 2,800 Pakistani families crossed the border into northeastern Afghanistan over the past two months to escape fighting between militants and Pakistani security forces in Bajur region.  Most of the people are reportedly in Kunar province.  (AFP, Sept-19)

UNHCR is asking Pakistan to revise its Afghan refugee repatriation plan, as the current plan to repatriate some 2.4 million refugees by the end of next year (2009) is “unworkable” due to persistent insecurity and lack of economic opportunities.  (BBC, Apr-18).

2007: UNHCR temporarily suspends the Afghan voluntary repatriation campaign in Pakistan until March 2008 due to seasonal slowdown.  (IRIN, Nov-2).  Pakistan has reportedly extended the deadline to close Jalozai camp until March 2008.  (IRIN, Sep-4).  The UNHCR has asked Pakistan to temporarily suspend closure of Jalozai refugee camp in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) that was originally scheduled to be closed on August 31.  UNHCR said due to the fast approaching Muslim holy month of Ramadan and winter season, conditions were not conducive for the return of some 100,000 camp residents.  UNHCR said any forceful return of these refugees could lead to secondary displacement. 

Pakistan is to close all Afghan refugee camps by December 2009 and to repatriate all refugees living in the country.  UNHCR says it has repatriated over 306,000 Afghan refugees from Pakistan so far this year under its voluntary repatriation campaign.  (UNHCR, Aug-10)

4.2 million refugees have returned to Afghanistan, and 500,000 IDPs returned home since early 2002.  Close to 3 million of the refugees returned from Pakistan.  2.6 million Afghans remain in Pakistan, including one million in 74 long-term camps. About 1.5 million Afghans returned from Iran. Taking into account unassisted returns, perhaps 600,000 to 700,000 Afghans remain in Iran—up to 30,000 are in seven camps.

Iran deported some 85,000 unregistered refugees to Afghanistan during April 21 - May 14, 2007.  Iranian officials say they plan to initially send back 500,000 of over a million illegal refugees in the country.  Earlier this week, Iran said it has reached an agreement with the Afghan government to slow down the pace of expulsions for illegal Afghans living in the country. 

Some 200,000 Afghan refugees in Pakistan have returned to their homes under the UN-assisted voluntary Afghan refugee repatriation program since it resumed on March 1, 2007, following a seasonal winter suspension.  Pakistani authorities said voluntary repatriation of Afghan refugees in Pakistan that are without proof of registration (PoR) ended in April, and refugees remaining in the country without PoR are now considered illegal and subject to government action.  Repatriation campaign for Afghan refugees with PoR.

2006: UNHCR expects to assist 550,000 returnees—400,000 from Pakistan and 150,000 from Iran.  However, so far this year only some 60,000 Afghan refugees have repatriated from Pakistan.  Unassisted returns are a factor from Pakistan and have been a major contributor to returns from Iran. The tripartite arrangement among UNHCR-Afghanistan-Pakistan is good through 2006.  The UNHCR-Afghanistan-Iran Joint Program has been extended into 2007.  Repatriation from Pakistan, halted for the winter, recommenced on March 1.  UNHCR assisted nearly 9,000 refugees in returning from Pakistan and over 500 from Iran during March.  In April 2006, Pakistan closed two long-term camps in NWFP, and two in Baluchistan Province with 250,000 long-term residents.  Refugees in Baluchistan can either return to Afghanistan or relocate to Mohammad Kheil camp near Quetta. Refugees in NWFP are moving to Afghanistan or one of ten camps in NWFP—refugees are pushing for a one-year delay. 

 

2005 plans called for 400,000 Afghan refugees to return home from Pakistan and 200,000 from Iran, down from an earlier 350,000 estimated from Iran. 453,000 returned from Pakistan.  67,000 from Iran were assisted and over 210,000 returned on their own to Iran for a total of nearly 280,000, and a combined Pakistan and Iran total of 733,000—close to the original projection.   

 

2004 plans were for one million to return.  Actual returnees were around 850,000, with 385,000 from Pakistan and 460,000 from Iran, including 80,000 spontaneous returns.  Pakistan closed camps in South Waziristan and all new camps, with remaining new refugees going to Mohamed Kheil camp in Baluchistan Province. 

 

 

Emphasis in 2003 was on repatriation from old camps and cities in Pakistan to rural areas in Afghanistan.  70 percent of returnees from Pakistan were from cities and 30 percent from camps.  Over a third returned to Kabul, another 10 percent went to other central provinces, and just over 20 percent returned to each of the north and east.  The Southern region received 6 percent and the Western region 4 percent.  The 2003 peak months were June and July.

 

In 2002 over 2.3 million Afghan refugees returned with 2 million assisted by UNHCR.  UNHCR repatriated 1.53 million Afghan refugees from Pakistan, including 125,000 from Baluchistan and 1.4 million from the North West Frontier Province.  82 percent were from urban areas; only 3 percent were from new camps.  265,000 refugees were assisted in returning from Iran; and 10,000 refugees from the central Asian republics. 

 

 


Afghanistan Relief Efforts:  United Nations Coordination Regions

 

Central Region

 

Location

Central Region

Coordination

 

 

Population

 

 

IDP Movement

No New Information

 

Food

There have been at least six attacks on World Food Program (WFP) food convoys in 2008, and WFP has temporarily suspended food delivery to Daikundi province.(IRIN, May-28)

Health

No New Information

 

NFIs -Shelter

No New Information

IOM, UNICEF, UNOCHA, & OXFAM

 

Water & Sanitation

No New Information

UNICEF

 

Security

 

Comments

No New Information

 


East Central Region

 

  Location

East Central Region

Coordination

UNHCR

Population

 

IDP Movement

The Afghan Ministry of Labor, Social Affairs, Martyrs and Disabled (MoLSAMD) and the International Organization for Migration (IOM) agreed to work together towards creating sustainable livelihoods for 2,000 recent Afghan returnees from neighboring countries. About 640,000 Afghans have returned from Iran and Pakistan this year. (IOM, Dec-16)

Food

The German Federal Foreign Office is giving another US$1.3 million (1 million Euros) to the UN World Food Program (WFP) to provide basic necessities to people in particularly remote areas of Afghanistan during the winter. Germany’s winter aid for Afghanistan amounts to US$8.45 million (6.5 million Euros). (Government of Germany, Dec-4)

 

The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) reported on December 9 that increasing attacks on food convoys by insurgents are leading to a food crisis. The attacks force convoys to take longer routes, thus increasing the cost of transportation and the food itself. Most food prices are already far beyond the reach of ordinary people. Aid agencies fear that the food crisis could exacerbate child malnutrition throughout the country. (UNICEF, Dec-9)

 

Health

No New Information

UNICEF, CARITAS, MSF, IFRC, IRC, ICRC

Non-Food Items - Shelter

No New Information

UNHCR, ACTED, MSF, IRC, ICRC, IOM

Security

At least 26 people were killed and about 54 were wounded in a series of coordinated attacks on government buildings in Kabul on Wednesday (February 11). A Taliban spokesperson claimed responsibility for the attacks, which targeted the ministries of justice, education and finance in Kabul, as well as a prison near Khair Khana district, north of Kabul. (AFP, CNN, Feb-11)

Water & Sanitation

An agreement has been signed between the UNHCR and the Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development (MRRD) to provide safe drinking water for Afghan returnees from Pakistan and Iran, as well as IDPs.  (UNHCR, Sep. 24)

 

ICRC

Comments

NATO entered talks with Afghanistan’s northern neighbors to allow the shipment of more supplies through those countries. The move comes as Taliban attacks on NATO supply lines through Pakistan increase and the local transport association suspended any convoys to Afghanistan beginning December-15. At least 75 percent of supplies to foreign troops travels through Pakistan. (BBC, Dec-15)

 
Eastern Region

 

 Location

Eastern Region

Coordination

UNHCR, International Islamic Relief Organization;

Population

 

IDP Movement

UNHCR

Food

NATO-led ISAF PRT transported water pipes for a nearly seven-mile-long planned water supply project in Baghlan province.  (NATO, Aug-23)

 

IRC

Health

No New Information

Non-Food Items - Shelter

No New Information

CWS, UNICEF

Security

Taliban insurgents attacked a hotel in Laghman province on the main highway linking Kabul to Jalalabad on the night of February 6, killing a district police chief and his bodyguard. (Reuters, Feb-7)

 

US-led forces shot and killed an Afghan civilian and wounded to others on February 6 when their vehicle failed to stop at a checkpoint in Khost province. (Reuters, Feb-7)

 

In Nangarhar province, unidentified gunmen killed the head of a provincial council on February 6. (Reuters, Feb-7)

 

Also in Nangarhar on February 6, a roadside bomb killed the chief of Bati Kot district. (Reuters, Feb-7).

 

Two NATO-led soldiers were killed Tuesday (February 10) and another was wounded when a roadside bomb struck a NATO convoy in Khost province. NATO did not confirm the victims’ identities, but most of the troops in Khost are from the US. (BBC, AP, Feb-10)

Water & Sanitation

CARITAS; ICRC, UNICEF

Comments

No New Information

 

Northeastern Region

 

  Location

Northeastern Region

Coordination

 

 

Population

 

 

Movement IDPs

9,000 active IDPs in North and Northeast

 

Food

No New Information

Health

Afghan officials and the medical team assigned to the Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) in Panjshir province coordinated with local leaders in two districts to augment health care to 563 people. (GoUSA, Oct. 23)

 

WHO, Merlin, UNICEF, MSF; ICRC

 

Non-Food Items (NFIs) -Shelter

 

UNICEF, ACTED, Refugees Int’l, Mercy Corps

 

Security

 

Water & Sanitation

No New Information

Comments

The Mine Detection Center (MDC), an Afghan NGO, has cleared 1 million square meters of landmines in Afghanistan’s northeastern region since January. According to UNAMA, 165 people have been killed and more than 1100 people have been injured in mine accidents in the four northeastern provinces of Kunduz, Baghlan, Takhar and Badakhshan. (UNAMA, Oct-21)

 

Northern Region

 

Location
Northern Region

Coordination

UNHCR, IOM

Population

9,000 active IDPs in North and Northeast; 60,000 IDPs from North elsewhere in country.

Movement IDPs

No New Information

IOM

Food

No New Information

Health

No New Information

MSF, ICRC, UNICEF

NFIs –Shelter

No New Information

IOM, ACTED, Mercy Corps

Security

 

Water & Sanitation

No New Information

UNICEF, ICRC, DACAAR

Comments

The European Commission’s Humanitarian aid Office and the NGO ActionAid launched a cash for work program in northern Afghanistan on October 22 aimed at providing about 5,000 families with enough food to cover half of their daily requirements through the winter. The program is active in 40 villages in Jawzjan Province’s Darzab and Qushtepa districts, and in Balkh province’s Dawlatabad and Kaldar districts. (ActionAid, Oct-22)

 

Southern Region

 

Location

Southern Region

Coordination

UNHCR

Population

 

Movement of IDPs

Intense military operations against Afghan insurgents in southern Helmand province, especially in Musa Qala district, have caused hundreds of families to flee their homes to neighboring districts and the provincial capital, Lashkargah. (IRIN, Dec-6)

Food

No New Information

UNICEF; Mercy Corps; CARITAS; WFP

Health

NATO reported on December-14 that hundreds of people received medical care and humanitarian assistance in Zabul province. Members of the Zabul Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT), the Afghan Army and coalition forces participated in the operation. (NATO, Dec-14)

 

Members of the Zabul PRT and of the Kentucky Army National Guard delivered four pre-fabricated medical containers to the Atgar district center. The delivery will help to improve the health care capacity in the province that has only one health care provider so far. (NATO, Dec-6)

NFIs - Shelter

No New Information

UNHCR, Mercy Corps

 

Security

Two US-led coalition soldiers and three Afghans were killed in Helmand province on Sunday (February 8) when a bomb exploded as soldiers attempted to defuse it. (CNN, Feb-9)

Water & Sanitation

No New Information

UNICEF

Comments

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said on December-13, that Britain will help Afghanistan with upcoming elections and has also offered to set up a task force to fight corruption. Britain plans to give Afghanistan US$10 million to register voters for next year’s elections. (CNN, Dec-15)

 

On December-19 Tooryalai Wesa, an Afghan-Canadian academic, accepted the post of governor in the volatile southern province of Kandahar. He will be officially sworn in on December-20. (AP, Dec-19)

 

 

 

Southern Region IDP camps

 

Location

Zhare Dasht - South of Kandahar – 6 camps

Type

IDP Camp

Coordination

UNHCR

Camp Capacity

30,000; expandable to 60,000

 

Population

 

125,000 IDPs in south; 48,500 at Zhare Dasht

 

Movement IDP

 

No New Information

Food

No New Information

WFP

Health

No New Information

UNICEF, MSF

NFIs – Shelter

No New Information

Security

No New Information

Water & Sanitation

No New Information

UNICEF

Comments

Support for Spin Boldak camps terminated in 2004.

 

 

Western Region

 

Location

Western Region

Coordination

UNHCR; ICMC

Population

No New Information

 

Movement IDPs

12,000 IDPs, mostly in Maslakh camp

IOM

Food

No New Information

IRC, CARITAS, UNICEF, World Vision, IOM, Action Contre la Faim; WFP

Health

At least three people were killed in an outbreak of highly contagious Viral Hemorrhagic Fever in Herat city that was first reported on August 25, according to the Ministry of Public Health. Officials confirmed 10 suspected cases as of August 27 and said most of the infected were butchers, shepherds or others involved with animals. The patients were put in quarantine. (IRIN, Aug-27)

Non-Food Items (NFIs) – Shelter

No New Information

Security

 

Water & Sanitation

No New Information

UNICEF

Comments

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) inaugurated an upgraded Radio Television Afghanistan (RTA) radio station and a media center in Qal-i-Naw district in the province of Badghis. IOM installed an AM transmitter and studio, with funding from the Spanish government. The new equipment has allowed the station to broadcast to every district in the province. (IOM, Oct. 24)

 

Refugee Camps in Pakistan

 

Location

Long-term camps in Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), NWFP, Baluchistan Province, and by capital, Islamabad; Mohamed Kheil 1 & 2 camps (85 km southwest of Quetta)

Type

Refugee Camps

 

Coordination

Afghanistan, Pakistan and UNHCR on August 2 extended the tripartite agreement governing the voluntary repatriation of registered Afghans from Pakistan through December 2009. The agreement provides a legal and operational framework for the process. To date, more than 3 million Afghans have returned from Pakistan under the voluntary repatriation program since 2002. This year, more than 300,000 Afghans have returned. (UNHCR, GOP, Aug-2)

Camp Capacity

About one million mostly long term Afghans in 74 camps—down from about 200 camps.

 

Population

2.05 million registered Afghans remaining in Pakistan; 63 camps in NWFP, 12 in Baluchistan; and one million elsewhere; Many occupants are long-term residents or were born in Pakistan; (UNHCR, Aug-2)

 

Jungle Pir Alizai (Balochistan): 36,000, originally scheduled to close June 15.

 

Kacha Gari (NWFP): original population of 64,811, officially closed July 26 – 37,000 repatriated. (UNHCR, July-27)

 

Jalozai (NWFP): 109,934, originally scheduled to close August 31.  UNHCR on August 22 requested Pakistan to temporarily suspend the camp’s closure due to insufficient time for some 100,000 people to move and settle into new places in the face of the fast approaching Ramadan and winter season. (UNHCR, Aug-22)  The deadline was extended to April 15 due to the impending winter. According to IRIN, at least 352 have left Jalozai so far in March.  (IRIN, Mar-20)

 

Girdi Jungle (Balochistan): 17,844, scheduled to close August 31.

(IRIN, June-14)

Refugee Movement

No New Information

Food

No New Information

WFP, CRS, ARC

Health

No New Information

UNICEF, MSF

Non-Food Items (NFIs) - Shelter

No New Information

CRS

Security

No New Information

Water & Sanitation

No New Information

IFRC, MDM

Comments

No New Information