Kabul, Dec 13 : Convulsed by war and civil strife for decades, Afghanistan has
experienced some of the largest ebbs and flows of migration anywhere in the
world.
It began with the Soviet invasion in 1979, which sent millions of
Afghans fleeing to Iran and Pakistan. When the Taliban were driven from power in
2001, many Afghans began returning home.
Now, the country has hit another
milestone: For the first time since 2002 and the beginning of the current war in
Afghanistan, the country has a negative migration rate — more Afghans are
leaving than returning.
The uncertainty of what Afghanistan will look
like after 2014, when the NATO forces leave, has many Afghans heading for the
exits, or at least trying to, and some are paying huge sums of money to get out
any way they can.
Aziz Momand is a 30-year-old taxi driver in Kabul.
Sitting in his road-worn Toyota Corolla wagon in the center of the city, he
explains his desire to leave.
"I have concerns that 2014 is arriving and
people talking that maybe the situation get worse," he says. "Already business
is down."
Momand says he's been thinking of leaving for the past year,
ideally to a Scandinavian country where, he says, asylum policies are liberal.
He says it's too difficult to get a visa, so he's been speaking with people
about smuggling his family to Sweden.
"The first step is to go to Iran,
then somebody smuggles us to Turkey, and then to Greece, and then to other parts
of Europe," he says.
The only problem with this approach, Momand says, is
that to get his whole family out, it will cost nearly $50,000 — a fortune for
most Afghans.
"If I have that much money, I would have already been
there," he says.
Even if he does get the money together, there's no
guarantee his family will make it safely to Sweden or avoid
deportation.
"The smugglers, they do their own propaganda. It's a
business, and so they are saying, 'It's easy to get here; we'll make sure you
have a great future,' " he says.
It's just the latest wave of
emigration in Afghanistan's turbulent history. At the height of the Soviet
occupation in the 1980s, the UNHCR, the U.N. refugee agency, estimates that
there were more than 6 million Afghan refugees in Iran and Pakistan alone — and
almost 1 million more in other parts of the world.
According to the
UNHCR, Afghan refugees accounted for slightly less than half the world's total
refugee population.
By the early 1990s — after the Soviet withdrawal — an
estimated 2 million to 3 million Afghans had been repatriated, though the rise
of the Taliban meant that at the same time, others were fleeing. The last major
shift in the flow of migration occurred after the fall of the Taliban in 2001.
In 2002 alone, about 2 million Afghans returned, according to the
UNHCR.
Now, that flow has reversed once again.
Marco Boasso heads
the International Organization for Migration office in Afghanistan. He says
concrete data about the numbers of Afghans leaving today are hard to come by,
especially given the criminal nature of trafficking.
"What we do know is
that the arrivals in Europe are unprecedented," he says, noting that arrivals in
Europe during the Soviet occupation and civil war were just 20 percent to 30
percent of today's numbers.
Boasso doesn't think the country will fall
apart after NATO troops withdraw in 2014, and the IOM is pushing the government
to create economic opportunities for people to stay in Afghanistan. Still, he
says exodus will continue.
"We will see more movement of people ... in
2014 because anxiety is there; there is a lot of uncertainty," he
says.
Embassies in Kabul are reluctant to discuss on the record whether
more Afghans are applying for visas. Many European countries don't issue visas
in Kabul, and Afghans have to travel to Iran or Pakistan to apply. Turkish
officials did say they have made the application process more cumbersome to
discourage all but serious travelers.
But there's another option for
Afghans flush with cash: buying visas.
NPR's Afghan reporters visited
several travel agents in Kabul, and were told that Turkish visas can be bought
under the table for $4,100. Russian visas are $17,000. West European visas are
most prized and cost at least $25,000.
These are real visas, the
reporters were told, but none of the agents would explain how the visas are
issued and who gets paid off along the
way.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Afghans begin new exodus, often at great cost
Afghans begin new exodus, often at great cost
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