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    APNewsBreak: Afghan asylum bids hit 10-year high

    KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — More Afghans fled the country and sought asylum abroad in 2011 than in any other year since the start of the decade-long war, suggesting that many are looking for their own exit strategy as international troops prepare to withdraw.

    From January to November, more than 30,000 Afghans applied for political asylum worldwide, a 25 percent increase over the same period the previous year and more than triple the level of just four years ago, according to U.N. statistics obtained by The Associated Press ahead of their scheduled publication later this year.

    Many Afghans are turning to a thriving and increasingly sophisticated human smuggling industry to get themselves — or in most cases, their sons — out of the country. They pay anywhere from a few hundred dollars to cross into Iran or Pakistan to more $25,000 for fake papers and flights to places like London or Stockholm.

    Thousands of refugees also return each year, but their numbers have been dwindling as the asylum applications rise. Both trends highlight worries among Afghans about what may happen after 2014, when American and other NATO troops turn security over to the Afghan army and police.

    The true numbers of people leaving is likely even higher — since those who are successfully smuggled abroad often melt into an underground economy. Still, the jump in a rough indicator like asylum seekers suggests the total numbers are also on the rise.

    Smuggling people out of Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan is a $1 billion-per-year criminal enterprise, the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime estimates. Those who pay to leave often face a risky journey and detention abroad because many developed countries now see many Afghans who flee as illegal economic migrants, not political refugees.

    Still, the business finds an eager clientele in Afghans such as Ahmad, an unemployed 20-year-old in Kabul. He has agreed to pay a smuggler $400 to take him over the Iranian border, where he hopes to find work and save up to move on to Europe in a few years. He has no money, but his smuggler is giving him credit — he'll have a month to pay up once he's in Iran.

    "I don't think anything will improve in three or five years, so it's better to leave now," said Ahmad, who expects to leave for Iran within a few weeks. He asked to be identified only by his first name for fear of being arrested.

    Ahmad's family fled to Iran during the Taliban's late 1990s rule and returned full of hope after the regime fell. But now, he sees no future in his homeland.

    "If foreign troops leave, the situation will only get worse, not better," he said.

    That's a view shared by many. Tajma Kurt, who manages an International Organization for Migration program helping Afghans who have returned home, says she's noticed a marked change in ordinary Afghans' outlook since roughly 2007, when the Taliban insurgency began to gain strength and violent attacks increased.

    "Before, they were looking for a job, discussing buying a house or whatever," Kurt said. "Now, they are all thinking of leaving because the situation has deteriorated dramatically and they don't see that it's going to get much better."

    Devastated by decades of war, Afghanistan is already the world's biggest source of refugees, with more than 3 million of its total population of 30 million still outside the country, most in Iran and Pakistan, according to the office of the U.N. High Commissioner of Refugees and the Afghan government.

    After the 2001 U.S.-led military intervention that toppled the Taliban, some 5.7 million Afghan refugees returned. The vast majority of those came back in the first five years. The numbers have since dwindled, with about 60,000 refugees returning last year, about half the number as the previous year.

    As the pace of returns slowed, the number of Afghans seeking asylum abroad rebounded. In 2011, 30,407 sought asylum through November, the latest available figures.

    Driving both trends is not only economic ambition but deep uncertainties about the country's future, says Abdul Samad Hami, deputy minister of Afghanistan's Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation.

    "Who knows what happens when foreign troops leave Afghanistan? Is it going to get better or worse? Who knows what happens with the foreign aid to Afghanistan — going down or increasing?" he said.

    Some Afghans fear that once most foreign troops leave, the Taliban will take over more territory and civil war could erupt along ethnic lines, as it did in the 1990s. Others worry the Afghan economy will collapse if foreign aid dries up.

    The real number of Afghans leaving is unknown, but undoubtedly higher than the asylum figures. The country's foreign ministry recently said 50,000 Afghans illegally entered Greece in the past two years alone, many of them now stranded without passports or money to move farther into Europe. Most of those arranged their journey with smugglers.

    For their money, many endure a perilous journey.

    Esmat Adine nearly drowned after the overcrowded boat he was on sank off Indonesia late last year, killing at least 200 fellow asylum-seekers headed for Australia. He says he left his wife and infant son at home in Afghanistan and paid $5,000 to travel to Australia after the Taliban threatened to kill him for working with American aid workers. He flew from Kabul to Dubai, then boarded a plane to Jakarta, Indonesia. From there, he was taken to eastern Java and was packed onto the doomed boat.

    When the vessel capsized, Adine managed to survive by swimming to a nearby island.

    "I swam and swam until I reached the shore," Adine, 24, told The Associated Press in an Indonesian detention center, where he is awaiting a ruling on his legal status. "I thought of how my wife and children are counting on me, of how I must earn a good life in Australia, free from intimidation."

    He says he still hopes to be able to enter Australia and send for his family.

    Australia has vowed to crack down on asylum-seekers but has been forced to relax a policy of mandatory detention because its detention camps are dangerously overcrowded.

    Hami, the Afghan refugee official, says the country has come a long way and if the transition goes smoothly, fewer people will want to leave. But he conceded that depends on whether the government can provide security and jobs.

    "If the situation gets worse, people will go out. If the situation gets better, people will return."

    ___

    Associated Press reporters Massieh Neshat in Kabul and Ali Kotarumalos in Indonesia contributed to this report.

     

    91 comments

    • Allank  •  4 mths ago
      The Taliban killing their own people may have something to do with it, I guess the support they claim isn't exactly that
    • Dave  •  Kalamazoo, Michigan  •  4 mths ago
      dont let them in the country! we have enough crime and drug problems from illigal and legal immigrants. we dont need muslim terrorist immigrants here!
      • Scorpio 4 mths ago
        there are over a hundred thousand american soldiers so what if afew Afghans come here. They are hardworking people and it is idiots like you that spread stereotypes about a whole religion or a whole nation. STOP spreading hate numb nut.
      • Bob 4 mths ago
        @Scorpio: just like any other group of people in the world, there are some hardworking Afghans, and there are some really lazy Afghans. It's kinda silly to assert that they're all hardworking people, a claim that you cannot back up. I spent 3 years in Afghanistan. I met some of the laziest and most apathetic people I've ever met in my life. But then it dawned on me: they really just reminded me of many of the black people I've met in America. *zing*
    • Ron  •  Moscow, Russia  •  4 mths ago
      Just keep them in Afganistan. We don't want them here instead of becoming westernized as they call it they want to muslimized the res tof the world and turn it into the same hellhole they left.
    • ADW  •  Camden, New Jersey  •  4 mths ago
      Another U.S. failure at nation building. When will we learn? Who is the real power behind the scene foisting these military escapades on the U.S. taxpayer?
      • A J 4 mths ago
        The same element that's been driving US policy for decades: Jews.
    • cybernaut  •  4 mths ago
      Muslims don't want to live with their own people. Big surprise. Yet they take that nasty religion with them wherever they go and bring problems to their adopted country.
      • Abker 4 mths ago
        Nasty Religion?.......what is the difference between Christianity and Islam?
      • cybernaut 4 mths ago
        To Abubaker: If you don't know, go ask your multitude of relatives!
    • JAMES  •  4 mths ago
      Two families moved from Afghanistan to America. When they arrived, the two fathers made a bet ... After a year's time, whichever family had become more Americanized would win.A year later they got together.The first man said, "My son is playing baseball, I ate McDonald's for breakfast, my wife is at the gym, and I'm on my way to pick up a case of Bud. How about you?"The second man replied, "Up yours, #$%$"
      • jer 4 mths ago
        I had almost forgotten that one! Yahoo ate your punchline, it's basically "F you, #$%$" Pretty funny joke, it's more about the assimilation process and becoming truly American than it is a put-down towards any immigrant group. Most won't see it that way because it isn't P.C.
      • John 4 mths ago
        Is the last word Muslim?? Or some other offensive word?
      • JAMES 4 mths ago
        The last word is indeed offensive. It's a common slur for people who wear fabrics wrapped around their heads.
    • user  •  West Jordan, Utah  •  4 mths ago
      there still a good news for US,: because of huge ocean they not able to come here like Mexicans do.
      • No more chances 4 mths ago
        The government will bring them in.
      • Right Wing Extremist 4 mths ago
        You bet, No More Chances ! The only difference is that the U.S. is bringing them in LEGALLY under the guise of "political asylum" !!! If we were allowed to see the figures of how many Afghans immigrated into the U.S. just last year, we would probably all have a heart attack !
      • Abker 4 mths ago
        You'll surely have a heart attack when you discover how many Afghan women were raped and how many woman and children were murdered by your youth in the invading forces.....perhaps you'll only know that when they exhibit the "war syndrome" when they turn on their own at home.
    • anonymouse  •  4 mths ago
      it's ironic that they don't want us in their country, but they're eager to leave when we start to leave.
    • over here in this line  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  4 mths ago
      Any stories about a mass migration into China?
    • gloria  •  Newark, New Jersey  •  4 mths ago
      Future human suicide bombers spreading out throughout the civilized world!
    • grinned reaper  •  Lorain, Ohio  •  4 mths ago
      All immigration needs to stop. The civilized world is is being over run by Third world Refugees and they can not support this influx , for the most part, Neanderthals..
    • Kelly  •  4 mths ago
      We don't need any more terrorist here . They need to stay in that POS country and we need to get out. they have already contracted China for mining let China try to control them
    • Yahoo! User  •  Murrieta, California  •  4 mths ago
      I do not want these crazy mother truckers living in the USA. Last thing I need to hear is a sob story of how they are victims while they are dealing heroin.
    • Lion  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  4 mths ago
      Who knows what kind of person he or she really is under disguised mask. Can any body find the difference?
    • CUBBYBOY  •  4 mths ago
      They ruined their own country and now want to be terrible citizens in another country? Force them to go back to what they created.
    • SnowRoo09  •  4 mths ago
      The Afghan people are desperate, they will try anything to find asylum in a country far away from their own. These people have the guts to get too Indonesia and from there they pay the people smugglers to get them to Australia. As if Australia doesn't have enough problems with Chinese, Vietnamese, (Druggies) Indians, they now get Afghanis, Iranians, Iraqis, Pakistanis, who travel half way around the world. These people are not poor, if they can pay their way half way around the world.
    • Ron  •  Moscow, Russia  •  4 mths ago
      Keep their #$%$ in Afganistan. They refuse to fight for freedom, they want handout and do not want to become westernized instead they want to muslimized the rest of the world and turn it into the hellhole they left.
    • fred c  •  Newport Beach, California  •  4 mths ago
      These folks are not stupid ... they know exactly what is coming ... and what is coming is ugly, bloody and is very taliban, repressive and anything but civilized.
    • randy  •  New Orleans, Louisiana  •  4 mths ago
      Arm the women.
    • iowan4u1234  •  Des Moines, Iowa  •  4 mths ago
      Require that they give up the muslim cult and join any other other religion or no religion to settle out of the country.
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