This article was published in farsi or dari in www.etilaatroz.com in October 2020. This is a Google translation to English. Not a single detail is changed.
One spring night in March 2018, when the weather in Sweden was just warm and mild, the atmosphere in Farzad's room (pseudonym) was heavy and cold. The clock was approaching 10 pm and the space of Farzad's mind was as heavy as his room. After a few minutes, he found himself on the ground in front of his friend's house, but he could not remember anything more. Farzad tried to commit suicide and threw himself out of the window of his friend's second house.
An hour
later, when Razad regains consciousness, he sees that his clothes are full of
blood and he feels a severe pain in his head: "It was unbearable."
But his friends and neighbors take him into the room instead of the hospital
and use water as the only available medicine to wake Farzad.
Farzad
Nojavan, like thousands of other asylum-seeking children and adolescents,
received a negative / negative response from the immigration court three times
and read the letter of summons to the police and leaving the house. When his
head and neck were flushed with blood and he was struggling with excruciating
pain, he could not go to the hospital; "I was in a place where I had
nothing and no solution," said Sweden, which has been blacklisted in
Sweden and denied all services such as bank cards, grants, housing, tuition and
more.
According
to Swedish child and immigrant rights activists, about 35,000 children applied
for asylum in Sweden in 2015, of which about 25,000 went to Sweden from
Afghanistan. "Sweden was one of the countries that" really
"welcomed these children in 2015, and Swedish families opened their doors
to these children:" Families when they found out that orphaned children
"After arriving in Sweden after a terrible accident, they decided to take
care of these children."
Child
rights activists in Europe say most of these children, aged 15 and under, have
migrated to war-torn countries such as Afghanistan, Syria, Somalia, Eritrea,
Iraq and Ethiopia to seek asylum in Sweden. . Some of these children have
smuggled and traveled to Europe alone, and some of these homeless children have
been separated from their families and companions during their travels to
Europe.
2015 is a
good year for unaccompanied children / guardians who have applied for asylum in
Sweden. The gates of Swedish families were opened for them, including school
and university courses, access to government and citizenship services, and the
promise of Swedish citizenship. But this good season will not last long.
President Ghani's participation in the Brussels conference marked a bad chapter
in the lives of these children in Sweden.
On the
sidelines of the Brussels Conference on October 2, 2016, a bilateral agreement
entitled "Joint Way Forward" was signed between the Government of
Afghanistan and the European Union. Facilitating the deportation of Afghans who
are rejected in European countries and preventing the illegal immigration of
Afghans to Europe are central to the treaty.
Under the
agreement, the European Union will continue to provide assistance to
Afghanistan in exchange for the deportation of Afghan refugees, and the Afghan
government has pledged to accept the deportees and provide them with a better
life in Afghanistan, such as education, employment and security.
At the same
time, Afghanistan has signed another bilateral agreement with the Swedish
government on the issue of migrants. In this agreement, the Afghan side has
pledged to pave the way for a return and a secure life. The agreement between
the Afghan government and the European Union provoked strong internal and
external protests.
"These
agreements are such that they use children to receive money [aid], which we do
not think is the right way," said Ms. Tornqvist. "Our group wants
only the voluntary deportation to continue, and aid to Afghanistan should not
be linked to the deportation of refugees."
As a result
of this change in Swedish immigration law, about 3,000 children and adolescents
have fled Sweden and are living in Paris, France, hoping to become citizens.
This is quite disappointing for children who came to Sweden at the age of 13
and wandered in another country after five years seeking citizenship. The young
Farzad has decided to stay in Sweden and live in secret with the help of a
Swedish family. But Akbar has another decision.
Akbar, 19,
is another young man who arrived in Sweden in 2015 and fled to Belgium for fear
of being deported after three negative immigration hearings. "The court
told us that your president was saying that Afghanistan was safe and that you
should return," Akbar told Rooz, adding that the court had not given
convincing reasons for rejecting his request.
Akbar says
that if he did not escape, the Swedish government would have transferred him to
a forward prison. According to Akbar, migrants who do not return voluntarily
are held in this place until they feel tired and have to sign a return request.
Akbar
studied in Sweden until the second grade of university and learned the Swedish
language, but now he has to re-lay the foundation of his life in Belgium and go
a long way.
Campaign
"Sweden! "Stay together!"
Following
the expulsion of a number of orphans from Sweden, a number of Swedish
organizations and institutions, including a large number of lawyers,
professors, child and immigrant advocates, writers, lawyers, publishers,
singers and filmmakers, including Bishop Emiritz K. Hammer The head of the
Swedish Church has launched a campaign on social media and social media
entitled "Sweden! Sweden!" Stay together! "Do not return
unaccompanied refugee children!" They have launched.
So far,
more than 13,400 people and 160 institutions, including organizations,
companies and schools, have joined the campaign. In addition, 18 other
activists, including professors, lawyers, writers, and prominent politicians,
serve as ambassadors for the campaign. The campaign ambassadors have thoroughly
reviewed the challenges facing orphans in Sweden and have complained to the
Swedish government at the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in Genoa. The
complaint alleges that the Swedish government committed blatant and proven
human rights violations and violations of the fundamental freedoms of
unaccompanied migrant children in the years following 2015.
The
complaint also alleges that Sweden has fulfilled its obligations under the
right to asylum, the rights of the child, the legal right to security and the
rule of law, the right to life in which everyone has the right to liberty, and
the personal security of thousands of homeless children who entered Sweden in
2015. Extremely endangered.
Campaigners
say the Swedish government's ill-treatment of these vulnerable children and
adolescents includes arbitrary reassessment of age, illegal detention and
forced deportation to war-torn countries, separation of families, school
classes and sports associations and associations across Sweden, and other
unjust acts. It leaves irreparable damage to the whole of Swedish society.
In the
European Union, no country can deport an orphan under the age of 18. But
children's rights advocates say Sweden sets the age of its children at will and
invalidates identity documents of the original country of the children.
"The
Swedish government has resorted to a kind of ploy to deport children,"
said Marit Tornqvist, one of the main leaders of the campaign. For example,
they decide the age of the children at will and do not accept the Afghan ID
card. "I was taking care of a 15-year-old child, but the Swedish
government set his age at 18 so he could be expelled."
"We
want permanent residency permits for all unaccompanied refugee children of all
nationalities who have lived in Sweden for more than a year," members of
the campaign told the Swedish government and parliament.
Ms.
Tornqvist also believes that many of these children, who lived in Sweden for
about five years, have changed culturally, behaviorally and visually, and that
the child is no longer an Afghan five years ago, but has adapted to Swedish
culture and behavior. have given. According to him, the lives of girls in
particular have changed a lot among children in particular, and they have
adapted to a free life: "There is a big difference between Afghan and
Swedish children. "Bringing these children back is like taking a Swedish
child to Afghanistan."
The
campaign's next step is to prepare a 30-page report on the situation of orphans
and submit it to the Swedish Ministry of Justice. Ms. Tornqvist says many
Swedes do not know the truth and that the government is hiding the truth from
the people that Afghanistan is not safe.
Last month
on September 15, more than 40 non-governmental organizations in OPPA issued a
joint statement entitled "Afghanistan is not safe: a common solution for
the future means two steps back" and called on European countries to expel
Prevent Afghan refugees.
Meanwhile,
for the second year in a row, Afghanistan is on the list of the most insecure
countries in the world. The UNAMA report for the first half of 2020 recorded
3,458 civilian casualties. The United Nations Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) estimates in its 2020 Overview that approximately
one-fourth of Afghanistan's population (9.4 million out of a population of 38
million) is in need of humanitarian assistance. According to Long War magazine,
66 percent of Afghanistan is either under the control of the Taliban or under
their control, but that figure was only 21 percent in January 2016. According
to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), 388,103 people have
either returned or been deported from Iran and Pakistan since January 2020.
The fate of
the deportees in Afghanistan; Suicide, the war in Syria and the Taliban
Refugee
rights groups in Afghanistan say closing European borders and deporting asylum
seekers from Europe has had no effect on Afghan migration. These institutions
say that asylum seekers deported from European countries to Afghanistan face
serious challenges and are exposed to serious harm; From security challenges to
addiction and the drug mafia, and from joining the Taliban to participating in
the Syrian war in support of the Assad regime.
Abdul
Ghafoor Rafi'i, head of the Afghan Refugee Advisory and Support Organization,
which has been working in the field of counseling and support for deported
asylum seekers from European countries for several years, says one of the most
important challenges for deported asylum seekers to Afghanistan is security.
And they lived in Pakistan and traveled to Europe from there: "They may
not have heard gunshots and explosions in their lives. "When they enter
the country, it is the first time they encounter war and explosions, and as a
result, many of them do not stay in Afghanistan for more than a week or two and
migrate again."
According
to Mr. Rafiei, the lack of relatives is another challenge that many immigrants
face, and many of their families left Afghanistan 20 or 30 years ago, and now
they do not know anyone in Afghanistan: "We talked to some people. They do
not know anyone except me in Afghanistan. "Those who have converted to
Christianity or atheism are at greater risk."
Morteza
Mousavi is a teenager who arrived in Sweden in 2014 and was forcibly deported
from Sweden after a year and a half after signing the Afghanistan-Europe
agreement. Morteza grew up in his uncle's house in Iran and currently has no
relatives other than a half-sister living in Iran.
The story
of Morteza, like tens and hundreds of other young people, is full of bitter
stories. When he arrives at Kabul Airport, he will receive a fare of only 1,500
afghanis. What will Morteza do with this money? Room, clothes, food or car
rental?
According
to the Afghan government's agreement with the European Union, deported asylum
seekers must receive financial assistance to be able to make a living in
Afghanistan. But refugee advocacy groups say the process of assisting returnees
from European countries is so controversial that only a small number of
deported asylum seekers are able to do so, and many will not be able to do so
after months, and some are frustrated. they do not.
The Afghan
Refugee Advisory and Support Organization temporarily accommodates asylum
seekers who have no place to live. Morteza uses this shelter to get help from
the government and the European Union, but he encounters difficulties.
"You go find a partner who has $ 4,000 or $ 5,000 in Dakash, go shopping
and bring us the purchase, and we give the money not to you, but to the
shopkeeper," said the distributor. "You bought from him."
"What
he said was not possible for us at all," Morteza told RFE / RL. We had no
place to eat and no food to eat. "Anyone who does not know us will not
partner with us."
After some
wandering, Morteza returns to Iran through smuggling, but is deported again.
Because he has no choice but to leave, he decides to travel again. While
crossing the Nimroz border, he noticed Iranian border soldiers and fired at
them. A bullet splits Morteza's leg and causes him to sleep on a hospital bed
in Tehran for several months.
The Iranian
government sentences Morteza to seven months in prison and fines him 14 million
tomans for crossing the border illegally. He was released from the hospital
just a few days ago and is being held overnight at his half-sister's house. He
was injured at the border of his abnormal kidney and had to be
"dialyzed" every few days. Although the fine and some of its expenses
are paid by asylum-seeking institutions, it remains to be seen how the disabled
will pay the high cost of dialysis and medical expenses. Problems that all
started with the decision of the Swedish Immigration Court. Now, instead of
focusing on lessons and a quiet life, he should think about the cost of
treatment and hospital beds in Tehran.
The head of
the Afghan Refugee Advisory and Support Organization says that there is no
monitoring of migrants returning from Europe and that the Afghan government
does not provide them with "the slightest help" except to provide a
list: "My personal experience is that most of them [ Refugees deported
from Europe] leave Afghanistan again. "Most of the people I saw are now
either in Iran, or in Turkey, or in Greece."
Asylum
seekers say the government has no regard for deported asylum seekers from
Europe, even though it receives financial assistance in exchange for deporting
them. Rafi'i says: "When I say do not accept the red border, they say why
not accept it? "The aid will be cut off."
Mr. Rafiqi
says that this group of asylum seekers is very vulnerable in every way; From
being caught in the trap of drugs to joining the Taliban and joining the war in
Syria in support of Bashar al-Assad's regime: "Because there is no better
option than this."
"The
deportation of refugees from Europe and the closure of European borders has had
no effect on Afghan migration," said Abdul Ghafoor Rafiei, who specializes
in immigration. No one wins. "European countries spend millions of dollars
to deport migrants, and migrants are forced to re-migrate and spend millions of
dollars."
Many
Afghans are currently fleeing the country due to insecurity, armed robberies in
cities and highways, the ambiguous fate of peace and a thousand other reasons.
The
"Common Solution for the Future" agreement expires on the first of
this month (October 6), but the two sides have extended it until the end of
this year. To extend this agreement, Afghanistan must prove that the conditions
are right for the return of asylum seekers, and on the other hand, European
governments must convince their own people that they have secured their
presence in Afghanistan for several years.
Mr. Rafiei
says that in this section, "a series of lies is going on. The Afghan side
is telling them that Afghanistan is safe and the governments are telling their
people that it is safe and some European countries and people are not aware of
the current situation. "Only asylum seekers are harmed here."
Response of
the Ministry of Immigration; The agreement is renewed
Officials
at the Ministry of Refugees and Repatriations say the "Common Solution for
the Future" agreement between Afghanistan and EU member states, signed on
October 6, 2016, is being extended.
Reza Baher,
the ministry's deputy spokesman, told RFE / RL that the agreement prevents the
forced return of Afghan refugees from Europe and provides more grounds for
their acceptance in the host countries: "The Afghan government has a
serious commitment and decision to extend this agreement. "And the technical
teams are working on how to extend it."
According
to the Deputy Spokesperson of the Ministry of Refugees and Repatriations, only
asylum seekers will be deported to Afghanistan under this Memorandum of
Understanding, whose asylum application will be rejected by the European
Migration Board and the three European courts. She says underage homeless
children, single women, female-headed households, the elderly and the seriously
ill are among the most vulnerable groups and are not forcibly expelled under
any circumstances.
Mr Baher
says only those who return voluntarily from Europe receive financial aid and
incentives ranging from 5,000 to 7,000 euros.
According
to the Ministry of Refugees and Repatriations, in the first three months of
2020 alone, 249 Afghan refugees returned from European countries, a process
that has been halted by the outbreak of the Corona virus and is set to resume.
The deputy
spokesman for the ministry said that the reason for the long process of cash
aid to returned asylum seekers was that European countries and aid agencies should
make sure that asylum seekers were reinstated in Afghanistan and that they
would not be allowed to migrate again with the same cash assistance.
The results
of a joint study by the Ministry of Refugees and Repatriations and the
International Organization for Migration show that between 2012 and 2018, about
three million Afghan refugees returned to the country and another two million
Afghans emigrated from Afghanistan, most of them via Iran to Turkey and Europe.
They have migrated illegally.
Mr Baher also
said that the Ministry of Refugees and Repatriations had signed a memorandum of
understanding with the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs on the return of
asylum seekers, who had introduced 100,000 returned refugees to the Ministry of
Labor for training and employment in the past five years.
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