Insecurity driving Afghan child migration

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Many Afghan children face deportation when caught overseas

Six years ago, when Najib was 15, Taliban fighters came to his home in Shinwar District in the eastern province of Nangarhar telling him to join them. After repeated visits, his family sought a way for Najib to escape, and paid a smuggler to take him to the UK.

Six years on, he has just arrived back in his village, having been deported from the UK, but the threats to get him to join the Taliban are now greater than ever, he says.

“They’re not like the Taliban that were in the area before,” Najib told Integrated Regional Information Networks (IRIN). “They are all foreign fighters who have come from the mountains. These guys will just kill you for no reason.”

Najib is not the only one on the move or considering his options.

Growing insecurity ahead of the pull-out of international forces is driving thousands of Afghan children to seek new lives outside the country.

Of the 893,700 claims submitted in 2012, around 21,300 were for “unaccompanied or separated” children, mostly from Afghanistan and Somalia, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

That is the highest figure recorded since the UN started counting in 2006.

According to a European Commission memo, unaccompanied Afghan minors, particularly boys, have become the largest group of unaccompanied minors outside the European Union (EU) over the past few years.

Of the 12,225 unaccompanied minor asylum seekers recorded by the European national governments in 2011, 5,655 (46 percent) were from Afghanistan.

Akram, father of 15-year-old Yahya told the UN Information Networks, “Some of my son’s classmates left Afghanistan and when they arrived in Belgium they called him, urging him to come there as well.”

“Finally my son left,” he said.

In Turkey’s port city of Izmir, the 15-year-old found smugglers to take him to an island off Greece. The cost was $2,000, to be paid upon arrival. Yahya never arrived; on the way the boat capsised, killing all but two of its 30 passengers. His body was never found.

“We have been waiting for two months. One or two bodies turn up everyday, but not my son’s,” said Akram, crying.

“It is extremely sad to see the kind of dangers these people are getting into when they are crossing waters,” the UNHCR representative in Afghanistan, Bo Schack, told IRIN. “There are major issues that they face along the journey. Upon arrival, they sometimes face violence and sexual abuse at the asylum centres,” he said.

Afghanistan has 2.6 million refugees overseas, according to UNHCR, making it the leading source of refugees in the world, a position it has held for the past 32 years.

On average one in four refugees are from Afghanistan; 95 percent of them live in neighboring countries Pakistan and Iran. Germany hosts the largest population of Afghans outside the region.

Insecurity and unemployment in Afghanistan remain high; according to the Ministry of Labour, Social Affairs, Martyrs and the Disabled (MoLSAMD), four million Afghans are officially unemployed countrywide and the real number is almost certainly far higher.

Thirty-six percent of the country’s population cannot meet their basic needs, with many more Afghans “highly susceptible” to poverty, according to a World Bank report.

As international troops and organisations downsize, they take with them jobs that currently employ many of the country’s young people.

“Around 40,000 to 50,000 young Afghans who speak English and are good at computers work with NATO troops. When the troops leave, they will be jobless and it is risky for them to stay in the country because they worked for foreigners,” Interpol Head in Afghanistan, General Aminullah Armarkhel, told IRIN.

“The most capable young Afghans with university degrees can not find jobs and so you have unqualified people filling positions. This is why we are seeing an increase in young people leaving the country.”

Afghans told IRIN that human smugglers ask anywhere from $10,000 to $20,000 for a passage to Europe. However, as in Yahya’s case, there is no guarantee that anyone will make it alive.

Last year in the UK, a Joint Committee on Human Rights (JCHR) report found that hundreds of children traveling unaccompanied to the UK received inadequate support from the state.

Upon arrival, the children faced intensive interviews. The report criticised the lack of interpreters to help with translation, inappropriate accommodation, staff ill-equipped to care for traumatised children and concerns over educational services.

Also, earlier this year, Human Rights Watch (HRW) found Italy summarily sending unaccompanied children (and adult asylum seekers) back to Greece-a country in which the asylum system and detention conditions have led several EU states to suspend their transfers to the country.

According to the HRW report, most of the asylum seekers interviewed were Afghan boys “fleeing danger, conflict, and poverty”.

Unaccompanied Afghan asylum-seeking adolescents living in the United Kingdom (UK) are a high-risk group for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), with many having been exposed to extreme violence, physical and sexual abuse, and rape.

The children experience significantly greater symptoms of PTSD and depression compared to other asylum-seeking children, found a new study which looked at the sleeping patterns of unaccompanied Afghan asylum-seeking children.

Many returning Afghan child migrants and refugees face the risk of rejection by their families, kidnapping threats, beatings and exploitation, often resulting in them trying to escape the country again, according to a MaastrichtUniversity report.

“I’m scared to go back to my village in Shinwar,” Najib told IRIN just prior to his return to his village. “Of course all the villagers know I was in London. My life is in danger. Kidnappers will think my family has money and because I speak English the Taliban will suspect me.”

Najib said that when his asylum application was denied in the UK, the immigration authorities told him Shinwar district was peaceful and it was safe for him to return.

A new initiative to improve reintegration prospects for deported, unaccompanied children in Afghanistan is being considered by the governments of Sweden, Norway, Holland and the UK.

It involves the setting up of a hostel for such children in Kabul, where they can stay until either they are picked up by their families or they turn 18.

Nearly all Afghans-96 percent, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross-have been affected in some way by the ongoing armed conflict, with 76 percent having experienced displacement.

Around 43 percent of the population is under-15: the ill-effects of conflict and displacement will have a strong impact on the next generation of adults.