Nearly 7,000 Afghans Return Home As UN Refugee Agency Resumes Repatriation
One month after resuming its voluntary repatriation programme of Afghans from Pakistan, the United Nations refugee
agency reported today that nearly 7,000 people had returned home with its assistance, a number that should balloon to
400,000 by the end of the year.
>From Iran, where the voluntary repatriation programme continued through the winter, the number of Afghans returning
since the start of 2005 was just over 4,000, a number expected to reach 350,000 this year, the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) said.
Overall, more than 3.5 million Afghan refugees have gone home from the two countries since the agency began a voluntary
repatriation programme in 2002, following the fall of the Taliban regime there.
Last year alone, UNHCR helped in the return of more than three-quarters of a million people. There are between 2 million
and 3 million Afghans still in Iran and Pakistan.
Under the repatriation programme, each returning Afghan receives a cash grant for transport assistance ranging from $3
to $34 per person depending on the destination. They are also provided with a cash grant of $12 in place of food and
non-food items distributed previously.