2015
Working environment
- The National Unity Government, formed in 2014, demonstrated a strong commitment to addressing issues of displacement throughout 2015. The Government developed a national comprehensive voluntary repatriation and reintegration strategy and established a ministerial-level High Commission on Migration, chaired by the President to coordinate its implementation.
- Despite these positive political developments, the situation in Afghanistan remained complex. 2015 witnessed the highest number of civilian casualties since 2009 and saw a dramatic increase in conflict-induced displacement. Over 380,000 IDPs were newly displaced as a result of conflict in 31 out of 34 provinces– a 70 per cent increase from the previous year – bringing the total number of IDPs in Afghanistan to nearly 1.2 million. Increasing insecurity coupled with drastic economic contractions led many Afghans to seek better lives elsewhere, including in Europe. Afghans were the second largest group of asylum-seekers in Europe after Syrians.
- While there was an overall increase in the number of returns to Afghanistan in early 2015 from major hosting countries in the region, this trend slowed in the second half of 2015, as growing insecurity in many parts of Afghanistan jeopardized opportunities for returnees to safely re-establish themselves in areas of return.
- Afghanistan continued to host 236,950 refugees from Pakistan’s North Waziristan. UNHCR launched an enhanced verification exercise to increase the accuracy of the population data, obtain key information on household vulnerabilities, protection risks and solutions prospects.
Population trends
- Over 58,000 Afghan refugees returned under UNHCR’s assisted voluntary repatriation programme.
- Over 380,000 new conflict-induced IDPs were displaced in 2015, bringing the number of internally displaced population up to 1.2 million.
- Communities in Afghanistan’s Khost and Paktika Provinces continued to host approximately 236,950 refugees (38,666 families) from Pakistan’s North Waziristan.
Achievements and impact
- A new portfolio of projects within the Solutions Strategy for Afghan Refugees (SSAR), developed by the Government with the support of UNHCR, was launched during the high-level segment of the Executive Committee on the Afghan refugee situation in October 2015. It offers a comprehensive and integrated framework for joint interventions aimed at facilitating voluntary return and sustainable reintegration. UNHCR also continued to advocate for the inclusion of returnees and IDPs in national priority programmes and development planning.
- An enhanced returnee monitoring programme, launched in 2015, provided a better understanding of the protection risks and reintegration challenges that returnees face in the initial phases of return in a complex and insecure environment.
- UNHCR continued to lead the protection and emergency shelter/non-food items clusters under the UN Transformative Agenda. A handover to OCHA of the overall coordination responsibilities on conflict-induced IDPs was initiated.
- Approximately 380,000 conflict-induced IDPs were profiled in accessible areas across the country in 2015 in a joint exercise with members of the IDP Task Force.
- As humanitarian needs rose due to renewed conflict, UNHCR expanded its assistance for people with specific needs, reaching out to the most vulnerable through a network of partners.
Unmet needs
- The needs of protracted IDPs remained largely unmet in 2015.
- Lack of progress in land tenure reform remained an obstacle in providing shelter to returnees.
- Insecurity contributed to the lack of long-term support for sustainable reintegration.