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Archive for July, 2008

Afghanistan: A lasting commitment [IRC at 75]

Posted by The IRC on July 31st, 2008

An Afghan boy at an IRc hospital shows his scar from surgery. (IRC photo)

An Afghan boy at an IRC hospital shows his scar from surgery. (IRC photo)

As we observe our 75th anniversary this year, International Rescue Committee president George Rupp is blogging about one moment from our rich history each month.

In December 1979, the Soviet Union airlifted troops into the mountainous country of Afghanistan.  The Soviets and their Afghan allies took the capital, Kabul, and launched nine years of war with indigenous resistance groups. Thus began three decades of conflict and massive displacement for the Afghan people, along with the devastation of their country.Within weeks of the Soviet invasion, the IRC rushed to the aid of Afghan refugees who poured into bordering Pakistan. In 1988, when the Soviets withdrew, the IRC established operations in Afghanistan itself to help its people rebuild. The IRC has remained at work with suffering Afghans in both places—through the rise to power in Kabul of the extremist Taliban regime in 1996; the U.S.-led invasion to overthrow the Taliban in 2001; elections establishing a permanent Afghan government in 2004; and, by 2008, renewed concern over a resurgence of Taliban guerilla fighters. The IRC’s efforts in Afghanistan are now the IRC’s most longstanding.

The consistency and quality of the IRC’s work in Afghanistan owe much to the skill and determination of our staff members, both international and Afghan. It is doubtful, however, that when then IRC board president John Whitehead made his first visit in 1980 to the makeshift refugee camps springing up on the Afghan-Pakistan border, he could have known what a long and difficult commitment the IRC was about to make. What John did know was that a terrible human tragedy was unfolding on the border: one in three Afghans—some five million people—had fled their homeland and were living in terrible conditions.

By the end of 1980, the IRC was operating an extensive program of relief. We dispatched mobile clinics and set up dispensary tents. Scouts went into the scattered encampments to bring sick refugees to the medical tents. Vocational and self-help programs were developed. One of the IRC’s greatest accomplishments was its educational programs, which ranged from preschool to postgraduate courses and included a high school for refugee girls in Peshawar. Among the young refugees who passed through the camps was Mohammed Haneef Atmar, now minister of education, who worked for the IRC as program director in Kabul before joining the government of President Hamid Karzai.  And when I met him in 2002, President Karzai reminded me that he had once taught English at our IRC school in Peshawar, Pakistan. 

In 1989, the Soviet Union withdrew from Afghanistan, ushering in, not an era of peace, but a new round violence and civil war. The IRC was one of the few aid agencies that continued to operate inside Afghanistan under the Taliban, with a team of Afghan national staff members who, among other activities, organized home schooling for Afghan girls forbidden an education under the regime’s rules.

Even before we established an official presence in Afghanistan following the Soviet withdrawal, the IRC was sending teams into the Afghan countryside to repair roads, rebuild irrigation systems, and establish public health and sanitation facilities. With the overthrow of the Taliban, the IRC ramped up efforts to help Afghans rebuild. In 2007, the IRC enrolled some 11,000 students in 400 schools and trained over 1,000 teachers.  Nearly 2,000 people graduated from our vocational programs. And we helped to establish locally elected community development councils in which villagers make the decisions.

Despite the continuing instability in Afghanistan, the IRC remains as committed to the land and its people as it was nearly 30 years ago.  Our staff is now 99% Afghan – talented colleagues, many of whom have been with the IRC for decades.  As Razia Stanikzai, an Afghan refugee and a field manager for an IRC education programs in Pakistan remarked, “We Afghans have bled a lot, and now we want our children to experience peace.”

You can read all of George Rupp’s history posts here.

Posted in Asia, children, education, history, refugees | 2 Comments »

Pakistan: IRC builds house of hope and learning

Posted by The IRC on July 30th, 2008


Photo: The IRC
Shoaib Mughal lives in Durbang, a village in the Khawara Valley of Pakistani Kashmir, where he works as a day laborer making 150 rupees ($2.50) per day to feed his wife and six children.Until the October 8, 2005 earthquake that devastated parts of Pakistan, Shoaib lived with his wife, Roma, and their children, three girls and three boys between the ages of one and twelve, in a small two-room house. They lived on a small compound with another house where Shoaib’s relatives, including his three brothers’ families and his parents, lived. The earthquake destroyed the houses.The Earthquake Reconstruction and Rehabilitation Authority (ERRA), a Pakistani government agency, compensated Shoaib’s relatives to rebuild house, however, Shoaib’s house was considered too small to rebuild. Shoaib received no compensation, and his family remained homeless.When the IRC came to Durbang, as part of a multi-sector rehabilitation project funded by Stichting Vluchteling, the Dutch refugee foundation, the community recommended Shoaib’s family receive a new house. Shoaib provided 30,000 rupees ($500) to help pay for the wood and masons, and the IRC covered the remaining cost in materials and skilled labor.

The new house site was located near the busiest road in Durbang. The site’s location served as an ideal open air classroom for IRC trainers to conduct training sessions demonstrating earthquake-resistant construction techniques, cinder block and brick placement and steel reinforcement, to the community.

Community members participated in the trainings. People from Durbang and the surrounding area stopped by everyday to see the house’s progress and observe construction techniques. Community members particularly valued learning steel fixing skills for reinforcing structures. Shoaib’s brothers utilized the techniques to rebuild their home.

“I am very happy to have a home constructed,” Shoaib said. “It had been my greatest worry.”

Once again Shoaib can focus on work and providing for his family, including raising enough money for his oldest three children to attend school.

“Now, I can try to send my children to school and work hard to give them a better future,” Shoaib said.