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Rather
than dispensing the branded drugs authorised by the United Nations
High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) for Afghans being repatriated
under the agency's auspices, ailing refugees are being administered
spurious or cheaper substandard medicines by the NGO contracted
to oversee the job. For example, Ibuprofen (brand name, Brufen)
has been substituted for Klint ñ a highly substandard replacement.
Refugees identified as candidates for repatriation by another
NGO working in the field, are sent to the implementing agency appointed
by the UNHCR mission in Karachi. Instead of receiving the required
assistance, a sizeable fee is demanded from the refugees for the
service that is supposed to be provided to them gratis.
A doctor employed at the VRC (Voluntary Repatriation Centre) at
the Hub Afghan Camp finds his services terminated because his 10
thousand rupee a month salary is considered too high. He is replaced
by a ëdoctorí charging only eight thousand rupees monthly.
Interestingly the money allocated for doctors under the UNHCR repatriation
scheme is in the range of 20 ñ 25 thousand rupees monthly.
These are just a few of the complaints that have poured into the
Karachi mission of the UNHCR. They come from assorted NGOs working
with Afghan refugees and former employees of local NGOs that have
been awarded the contracts for the repatriation project ñ
some of whom had their services terminated after they filed the
complaints.
While the list of allegations of grave irregularities reported to
UNHCRís Karachi mission is lengthy, the following is all
the latter reported to its head office: in Islamabad. ìAlthough
the health units at the VRCs are providing medical assistance to
the repatriates, paying special attention to the possibility of
dehydration of youngsters during the long journey [back to Afghanistan],
we received a report that three children coming from Karachi died
of dehydration in the Kandahar encashment centre. The medical unit
is providing one package of ORS to each child up to 15 years of
age for the tripÖî
The reluctance of the Karachi UNCHR mission to relay the information
it had received to its head office owes to a simple fact: its own
alleged complicity in the malpractices.
The corruption of the NGOs involved in these irregularities, allegedly
in collaboration with some senior UNCHR officials, has in fact stymied
to a large extent the greatest repatriation of refugees in world
history.
Soon after the fall of the Taliban and the takeover of the interim
Afghan government by Hamid Karzai, the international community began
to devise repatriation schemes for Afghan refugees in neighbouring
countries such as Pakistan, Iran and Central Asia. While there was
tacit acceptance of the fact that thousands of refugees would not
voluntarily return home, and could not be forced to, the attempt
was to facilitate those who were willing to return to Afghanistan.
After the Tokyo conference in January 2002, where the heads of different
countries pledged to contribute five billion dollars for the rebuilding,
reconstruction and rehabilitation of Afghanistan, the world community
agreed to aggressively encourage the repatriation. It is, of course,
a different story how the international community has betrayed the
Afghan nation by releasing only a fraction of the funds pledged
in Tokyo, but the repatriation effort was undertaken by the UNCHR
nonetheless.
It launched its operation in Pakistan, where according to one estimate,
at least 3.2 million Afghans have sought refuge. The UNCHR project
in Pakistan, a 273 million US dollar enterprise proposed to repatriate
some 400 thousand refugees in its first phase, from March 2002 to
December 2002. As part of the programme, VRCs were set up in different
parts of the country, especially where there were larger concentrations
of refugees, such as parts of NWFP, Balochistan and Karachi.
Rather than appointing its own staff at these VRCs, the UNCHR awarded
a local NGO, SHARP, which had earlier been engaged in other projects
with the UN mission, the contract to assist it in implementing the
repatriation operation. SHARP was involved in all the phases of
repatriation, including surveys of refugee clusters, an agency information
campaign, pre-registration of Afghans, verification and registration
of those Afghans who opt for voluntary repatriation assistance,
and data base management. A huge budget of several million rupees
was allocated and put at the disposal of SHARP for staffing and
other repatriation-related activities, including construction of
the VRCs.
According to the plan, when a refugee family indicated a desire
to return to Afghanistan, they would not receive any funds in Pakistan
because it was feared they might renege on their plan to return
once they had the money, but they would be given Voluntary Repatriation
Forms (VRFs) the VRCs in the area which they could encash from UNCHR
offices in Afghanistan upon their return.
Encashment centres for
this purpose were set up by the UNCHR at Kandahar and Jalalabad.
As a part of the deal, once the refugees display their VRFS at the
centres, the UNCHR staff gives them 150 US dollars as an incentive,
along with 50 kilograms of wheat, blankets, tarpaulins, buckets,
etc.
The problems began when a new mission was set up in Karachi in March,
where the UNHCR identified about 0.7 million Afghan refugees who
were potential repatriates. A Kenyan national, William Sakataka,
was asked to the lead the mission.
Earlier, Sakataka was heading UNCHR operations in Quetta, but the
agency had to remove him from there allegedly after complaints piled
up against him sexual harassment of female workers of various NGOs
working with the UNCHR. Although several reports had been filed
at the UNHCR head office in Islamabad and at the agencyís
headquarters in Geneva about Sakataís activities, it was
the hue and cry raised over his attempted seduction of a local girl
in Quetta, who happened to be related to a tribal chief, that prompted
the UNCHR to evacuate Sakataka and send him back to Kenya.
Not long afterwards, however, the UNCHR set up its mission in Karachi,
and he was recalled from Kenya to take it over. When Hasim Utkan,
the UNCHR country chief was asked why the UNCHR had given charge
of such an important mission to a man accused of serious offences,
he responded, ìIt is the internal problem of the department.î
After UNCHR was office in Karachi set up it decided to seek assistance
from local NGOs who had been working with the Afghan communities
in Karachi. SHARP was provided a lucrative contract, and assistance
was also sought from FOCUS, an NGO run by Agha Khanis which has
been assisting Afghans mainly from Hazara, for the past several
years, and the Marie Adelaide Leprosy Centre (MALC), an NGO run
by Dr. Ruth Pfau, a German lady who has been working for the eradication
of leprosy in Pakistan for many decades and has worked closely with
Afghan refugees, FOCUS agreed to supply medical teams to thye VRCs
free of cost, and MALC committed to assist the UNCHR in its repatriation
drive.
Since the repatriation involves a long, arduous road journey, the
UNHCR also awarded contracts to another NGO Health Vision, purported
to be working in the health sector, to carry out medical check-ups
of the returning refugees. According to plan, this NGO was to identify
those who were healthy enough to travel, while those who were infirm
in any way were to be provided treatment and sent on their way once
they were fit to travel. This NGO was assigned to appoint its own
staff for this project and was provided funds for this purpose and
branded medicines to dispense to the refugees when required.
As the refugees started hearing about the incentives being provided
to the refugees willing to repatriate, they started pouring in to
the two repatriation centres set up in Sohrab Goth in Karachi, and
the one in Hub in district Balochistan, bordering Karachi.
Given the numbers, which grew daily according to sources, staff
members of SHARP soon realised what a goldmine the repatriation
operation could be for them. Thereafter SHARP employees allegedly
started demanding bribes from the refugees in return for VRFs. Furthermore,
they forced the returning Afghans to take the mode of transport
to Afghanistan they dictated to them, because by now they had also
cut deals with the transporters plying the Pak-Afghanistan track.
Normally the fare from Karachi to Quetta is 350 rupees and the cost
for the charter of an air-conditioned coach is in the range of 10-15
thousand rupees. The refugees were made to pay between 20 and 30
thousand rupees for the latter.
According to sources, since the vehicles carrying the refugees were
given a sort of ëdiplomatic immunityí because UNCHR
had requested various provincial departments not to harass the passengers
on their way back to Afghanistan, the transporters decided to start
a smuggling operation alongside ferrying passengers. A few vehicles
loaded with contraband items were, in fact, apprehended by Pakistani
authorities at the border.
SHARP employees allegedly went even one further: professional Afghan
smugglers were provided several sets of VRFs under fake names. They
would buy commodities in Pakistan, travel to Afghanistan, sell them
there encash their VRFs and return to Pakistan for further business.
As a result, many genuine Afghan repatriating families with VRFs
were made to wait for days at the encashment centres to have their
credentials verified.
All this was happening in clear view ñ and it is reported
in collusion with ñ UNHCR staff in Karachi. Even when some
UNHCR officials did catch the SHARP staff red-handed while taking
bribes from the refugees, no action was initiated against them.
One example is that of Peter Kassier, a UNHCR official who, in his
correspondence with another official, Jack Redden, mentioned that
the UNHCR had caught SHARP employee at Takhtbaig in August demanding
bribes from the refugees and warned them to desist from such malpractices.
However, no action was taken against them.
Because of the increasing number of reports of irregularities, Ruth
Pfanís NGO MALC, decided to distance itself from the repatriation
project, making it clear that it could not accept the suffering
of the refugees at the VRCs, due to the methods employed in the
repatriation, which said Dr. Pfan, amounted to a breach of trust.
In a letter to the UNHCRís Karachi mission Dr. Ruth Pfau
wrote, ìAt present we are feeling [we are] being usedÖ
We send [you] a group of people at our own expensesÖ We do
trust that you will register them so that they get their 140 US
dollarsÖ they have been waiting in Karachi for quite some time,
putting up with quite some trouble, and I anyhow feel we donít
compensate them even with a fraction for the harm and hardships
we caused themÖ With the half of the information withheld from
us today, I feel at the moment too insecure to continue to work
with UNHCR so closely.î
While MALC refused to work with the UNHCRís Karachi mission,
the other NGO, FOCUS, that had offered the repatriates free medical
assistance, had its services unceremoniously dispensed with for
no apparent reason, and the unknown and reportedly dubious outfit,
Health Vision, was awarded the contract and huge funds placed at
its disposal.
Sources disclose that this development owed to Sakatakaís
increasingly cordial relationship with one Dr. Shafqat Soomro, a
former employee of the provincial excise and taxation department
who was dismissed from office because of corruption charges, Health
Vision allegedly earned the contract from the UNHCR as a quid pro
quo for ëservicesí Soomro provided to Sakataka. According
to a letter that has been sent to the UNHCR head office at Islamabad
and also to Geneva, Dr. Shafqat provided Sakataka an apartment in
Clifton, access to various nightclubs and catered to his penchant
for assorted nocturnal proclivities.
According to reports, after Sakataka deputed the latter to locate
an NGO working in the health sector, Health Vision an NGO, that
was earlier registered by one Dr. Sharif Thaheem, was identified,
and Dr. Shafqat Soomro became its general secretary. Thereupon the
FOCUS staff was given their marching orders by the Karachi office
of the UNHRC and the contract was awarded to Health Vision for carrying
out health operations at the centres for a nine month period.
In return, other than the funds which Health vision received to
appoint new staff and for salaries, it was provided branded drugs
which were to be distributed among the repatriates according to
need.
From the outselt Health Vision reportedly reneged on its part of
the deal. Instead of paying the medical staff salaries drawn up
by the UNHCR, medical staff, the organisation appointed quacks in
place of doctors, along with other unskilled paramedics for a fraction
of the stipulated amount in direct contravention of its contract.
Furthermore, the branded drugs allocated for the refugees, were
sold in the open market by Health Vision, and substandard and unbranded
drugs were supplied to the returnees instead.
Interestingly, many doctors working on the project apprised the
UNHCR monitoring staff in Karachi about the state of affairs, but
instead of initiating action against Health Vision, the agency sacked
the doctors from their jobs. One of the victims of this travesty,
Dr. Mohammed Ashfaq Shaikh, found himself out of a job when he complained
to the UNHCR staff about Health Visionís ongoing malpractices,
even though it was in confidence. The information was apparently
leaked to the NGO who saw to it that the doctor was fired.
In addition to the host of malpractices by the NGOs, the repatriation
exercise has been made even harder because of the role of many refugees
themselves. According to UN officials, they have rejected claims
by some 50,000 refugee families, because they were trying to qualify
for basic assistance more than once.
Nonetheless, UNHCR country chief, Hasim Utkan in Pakistan, claims
that they hav so far repatriated 1.6 million refugees to Afghanistan
in the last few months. However, this figure includes repatriates
from Iran as well, another country that has played host to the Afghans
for many years. The UNHCR chief bases his claims of the number of
repatriates on the number of VRFs that have been disbursed. According
to insiders, the actual figure of those who have genuinely returned
to Afghanistan permanently does not exceed 500,000.
In a meeting held on June 2, the UNHCR admitted that the performance
of the staff at the VRCs is unsatisfactory and unskilled staff has
been appointed at these centres, but no action was taken against
anyone. However, when complaints piled up against the Karachi operation,
sources disclosed the UNHCR sent a special mission from Islamabad,
headed by Marc Andre Bunzli, who is serving as senior technical
coordinator for the agency. After investigation Bunzli filed a detailed
report about the affairs of the NGOs working with the UNHCR, and
he Karachi the mission agreed to address the allegations levelled
against Health Vision, and also against some members of the UNHCR
staff.
Information about the sorry state of affairs leaked to the public
when office-bearers of SHARP, the other NGO involved in the registration
and repatriation drive, fell out with each other and started to
air their dirty linen in public.
In a meeting of the members of the Central Executive Comittee of
SHARP, held on September 10, chairman Liaqat Binori was dismissed
from his paost for his involvement in massive corruption. A copy
of the minutes of this meeting were sent to the UNHCR, and also
to assorted banks asking them to close SHARPís accounts to
investigate the financial irregularities that had occurred. Asif
Qadri was appointed the new chairman of SHARP.
Suprisingly, thereafter Liaquat Binori issued a press statement
saying the differences within SHARP had been sorted out amicably.
Accordingto the statement. ìMr. Asif Qadir resigns from the
chairmanship of SHARP and Mr. Liaqat will remains functioning as
its chairman.î A copy of the new ëresolution,í
submitted by Binori to the press, action taken by anybody at any
forum, including UNHCR/Standard Grindlays Bank, the Registration
Authority, etc., [against SHARP] stands cancelled and withdrawn
with immediate effect.
While UNHCR officials refuse to comment on the situation, the Sindh
home department has issued a letter to UNHCR, inquiring about irregularities
by SHARP and Health Vision ñ UNHCRís two implementing
partners ñ who stand accused of causing manifold administrative
problems for the provincial government. The home department has
demanded that the UNHCR form a speaicl task force to invesgate the
matter properly. ìMay I also avail this opportunity to reiterate
our desire to review the implemeting partners presently working
with UNHCR in [its] Karachi operation, as there have been reports
that the implementing partner, namely Health Vision, is involved
in many irregularities and providing substandard services to returnees,î
reads the letter written by Nasrullah Larik, a deputy secretary
of the provincial home department.
Insiders disclose that the UNHCR head office in Pakistan is trying
to hush up the case because it has been claiming to its headquarters
in Geneva that its repatriation project has been successful.
When questioned about the situation, UNHCR country chief, Hasim
Utkan contended that while there have been many reports of irregularities,
he had not received any concrete evidence which could lead the agency
to take action against any of those accused. However, the maintained
all allegations are currently under review by the UNHCR, and appropriate
action will be taken if and when deemed necessary. 
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