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Pakistan announces more Afghan camp closures
ISLAMABAD, August 6
(UNHCR) – In a move to further consolidate the Afghan refugee population
in Pakistan, the government in Islamabad has announced its decision to
close all camps in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas and to move
Afghan refugees now scattered in and around the capital. The announcement is based on a decision by the government last year to close these refugee camps due to security concerns. UNHCR supports the decision as the FATA area has been the scene of continuing clashes between the Pakistani army and rebel tribesmen linked to fighting in Afghanistan. The insecurity has made it impossible to assist the refugees properly. Camps in South Waziristan were closed last year and camps in North Waziristan closed at the end of June this year. In Balochistan province, Jungle Pir Alizai camp closed in July while Girdi Jungle camp will vacated by August 31. Meanwhile, more than 60,000 Afghan refugees around Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, are also set to move.
On Tuesday, the Pakistani government announced that Afghans
living in Islamabad
and neighbouring Rawalpindi, often in squatters' settlements, will be
transferred away from these locations. This decision was made more than a
year ago, but the Afghan government and elders from the Afghan communities
had asked for the move to be postponed.
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