Amnesty International Press release
18 February 2009

Tens of thousands of Afghans displaced from their homes by escalating
fighting and ongoing food shortages require immediate humanitarian
assistance.

Amnesty International has called on the international community to implement
a comprehensive strategy for assisting the Afghan people. The call came as
US President Barack Obama announced the deployment of an additional 17,000
US troops to Afghanistan.

"The US and the international community should adopt an approach that
emphasizes the rights and well-being of the Afghan people and not just focus
on a military solution," said Sam Zarifi, Amnesty International's
Asia-Pacific director.

Around 235,000 people are currently displaced in Afghanistan, according to
estimates by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Most
are displaced as a result of the fighting between government forces (and
allied US and NATO troops) and armed opposition groups including the
Taleban, particularly in the South, Southeast and Northwest regions of the
country.

"Another hard winter has arrived in Afghanistan and tens of thousands of
Afghans who already had some of the lowest standards of economic development
in the world have been forced out of their homes," said Sam Zarifi.

The fighting between various armed groups in Afghanistan has aggravated the
effects of an ongoing drought and growing food insecurity in northern and
western Afghanistan, forcing thousands of families to seek shelter in
relatively safer and wealthier areas, such as Herat and Kabul.

Most people displaced by fighting in Afghanistan have remained in southern
Afghanistan, including in camps near Kandahar, where they remain vulnerable
to ongoing fighting between government forces and the Taleban and are
largely cut off from international assistance.

In December 2008, Amnesty International researchers visited several informal
camps in Kabul and Herat provinces. Those interviewed said they received
little, if any, assistance from government or non-government agencies.

"People in the camps in Kabul and Herat are living in extremely inadequate
shelters with almost no heating and no bedding, where small children and
elderly people had to sleep on the wet floor. Most of the people in those
camps have little or no access to food, drinking water, health services and
education," Sam Zarifi said. "Our researchers also came across numerous
instances of communicable diseases such as tuberculosis."

A 35-year-old mother of eight in an informal camp in Kabul told Amnesty
International:

"It's about a year since we became displaced from Helmand province to Kabul
because of the fighting . Our homes were bombed and we lost everything we
had. Here we have nothing, no job and no assistance. It was a long time ago
when we received some rice and coal from an Afghan businessman. Since then
we have nothing and I have to spend days and nights with no food."

According to the Afghan NGOs Safety Office (ANSO), in 2008, 31 staff members
of non-governmental organizations were killed in Afghanistan, while 78 were
abducted. ANSO recorded 176 attacks against NGO staff and facilities. So far
in 2009, one NGO staff member has already been killed, seven have been
abducted, and there have been 25 attacks against aid convoys and facilities.


"By targeting and killing aid workers, armed opposition groups are
committing war crimes. They are also preventing the delivery of essential
humanitarian assistance, thereby worsening the already miserable conditions
facing tens of thousands of people who are already suffering from hunger and
cold, particularly women and children cut off from health care and
education," said Sam Zarifi.

All parties to the conflict, including armed opposition groups, have a legal
obligation to allow and facilitate safe passage of impartial humanitarian
assistance to civilians lacking supplies and services essential for their
survival.

Amnesty International has called on the Afghan government, particularly the
Ministry of Refugee and Repatriation Affairs, and all the other national and
international aid agencies to provide immediate assistance for the
displaced, including essential food and potable water, basic shelter,
appropriate clothing and heating materials as well as essential medical
services and sanitation, in line with the UN Guiding Principles on Internal
Displacement.

-- 
W A Laskar
Freelance Reporter and Human Rights Activist
with Barak Human Rights Protection Committee,
http://bhrpc.net.googlepages.com
15, Panjabari Road, Darandha, Six Mile,
Guwahati-781037, Assam, India
Cell: +919401134314

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