KABUL, June 1: More than 120,000 refugees have returned to Afghanistan this year with UN help, the world body’s refugee agency said on Sunday, warning the country had limited capacity to take people back.

Ninety-nine per cent of the 123,244 returnees had arrived from Pakistan and most of the remainder from Iran, UNHCR public information officer Mohammad Nadir Farhad said in a statement.

Most of the returning families had gone back to where they had originally come from, he said.

But several temporary settlements had sprung up as “some families have not been able to return to their place of origin because of tribal conflicts, landlessness or insecurity.” Strife-torn Afghanistan has one of the biggest refugee populations in the world.

People began to flee in the 1970s and eight million were outside their country by the 1990s.

Since 2002, the year after the fall of the Taliban government, the UNHCR has helped more than four million Afghans return home but there are still about two million in Pakistan and one million in Iran.

Afghanistan is battling to defeat a growing Taliban-led insurgency that is hampering development. Its weak economy and unemployment rate of about 40 per cent has led many men to cross into Iran illegally to work.

“Afghanistan’s capacity to absorb additional returns sustainably and avoid placing additional pressures on existing patterns of out-migration is limited,” Farhad said.—AFP

Opinion

Editorial

Anti-women state
Updated 25 Nov, 2024

Anti-women state

GLOBALLY, women are tormented by the worst tools of exploitation: rape, sexual abuse, GBV, IPV, and more are among...
IT sector concerns
25 Nov, 2024

IT sector concerns

PRIME Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s ambitious plan to increase Pakistan’s IT exports from $3.2bn to $25bn in the ...
Israel’s war crimes
25 Nov, 2024

Israel’s war crimes

WHILE some powerful states are shielding Israel from censure, the court of global opinion is quite clear: there is...
Short-changed?
Updated 24 Nov, 2024

Short-changed?

As nations continue to argue, the international community must recognise that climate finance is not merely about numbers.
Overblown ‘threat’
24 Nov, 2024

Overblown ‘threat’

ON the eve of the PTI’s ‘do or die’ protest in the federal capital, there seemed to be little evidence of the...
Exclusive politics
24 Nov, 2024

Exclusive politics

THERE has been a gradual erasure of the voices of most marginalised groups from Pakistan’s mainstream political...