Roots, Repatriation, and Refuge: Pakistan and the Afghan Refugee Crisis

I. Khan
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Abstract

In the world today, registered Afghan refugees total approximately 1.6 million with one to two million more living undocumented in border nations like Iran and Pakistan. They are the largest ‘protracted’ refugee population on the Asian continent and have existed in a perpetual state of displacement since the Soviet-Afghan War from late 1970-1980. The status of these refugees in Pakistan today remains steadfastly connected to the concepts of displacement, migration, settlement, and repatriation. This research paper explores how the Afghan refugee crisis evolved within the confines of socio-cultural, political, economic, and historical crises created and imposed by international actors who sought to control it for their own purposes. A major component of finding a solution to the Afghan refugee crisis requires us to move away from the overworked ‘objective’ view of their situation and toward a more subjective identification of their personhood as refugees, and this act pulls into itself the question of how they dealt with and continue to deal with refuge and resettlement in Pakistan. Furthermore, the Afghan refugee crisis is an ongoing global dispute involving human lives that requires much more attention and sincerity than it has received.
根源、遣返与避难:巴基斯坦与阿富汗难民危机
在当今世界,登记在册的阿富汗难民总数约为160万人,其中还有100万至200万人在伊朗和巴基斯坦等边境国家无证居住。他们是亚洲大陆上最大的“长期”难民人口,自1970年后期至1980年的苏联-阿富汗战争以来,他们一直处于永久的流离失所状态。这些难民今天在巴基斯坦的地位仍然与流离失所、移民、定居和遣返的概念紧密相连。这篇研究论文探讨了阿富汗难民危机是如何在社会文化、政治、经济和历史危机的范围内演变的,这些危机是由试图为自己的目的控制它的国际行动者创造和强加的。找到阿富汗难民危机解决方案的一个主要组成部分,要求我们从过度劳累的“客观”角度看待他们的处境,转向更主观地认同他们作为难民的人格,这一行为本身就涉及到他们如何处理并继续处理在巴基斯坦的避难和重新安置问题。此外,阿富汗难民危机是一场正在进行的涉及人的生命的全球争端,需要比它所得到的更多的关注和诚意。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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