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Hopeless and Broke

by AFP
Afghan migrants at a refugee camp in Greece. Angelos Tzortzinis—AFP

Afghan migrants at a refugee camp in Greece. Angelos Tzortzinis—AFP

Some Afghan migrants to Europe are returning home after encountering hostility in adopted lands.

After risking death on the migrant trail and two months in “nightmarish” refugee centers in Germany, Mohammed Asif bought a one-way ticket back to Afghanistan, relinquishing his lifelong dream of asylum in Europe.

Afghans are the second-largest migrant group—behind Syrians—arriving in Europe, where authorities are struggling to cope with the continent’s worst refugee crisis since World War II.

A small but growing number, like 26-year-old Asif, are now returning to their country torn by war and gripped by economic malaise, as overcrowded refugee centers, a lack of jobs and the rise of anti-immigrant fervor in Europe leave them disillusioned.

“I thought Europe would offer me a comfortable life, but I found only hostility and pain,” said Asif, who has a graduate degree in economics and left for Germany with a people-smuggler last year. “The refugee camps were nightmarish and Europeans kept humiliating us all the time. Many of them say refugees will destroy the culture of their country,” he said after returning to Kabul.

A chartered plane last month brought 135 disillusioned Afghan refugees back from Germany, in what is likely to be the first of many such flights organized by Kabul, Berlin and the International Organization for Migration.

Afghanistan is witnessing what local officials call an “unprecedented” migration toward European nations as tens of thousands of civilians flee decades of turmoil and war tearing their country apart. Smuggling networks are flourishing, making money from desperate migrants undertaking dangerous journeys on well-trodden Mediterranean trails via Iran, Turkey and Greece.

But many realize, rather belatedly, that most smugglers sell them a pack of lies about big mansions, lucrative jobs and a cozy life in Europe. “The most dangerous part of my long journey to Europe was from Iran to Turkey,” Asif recalled. “There was an overweight Afghan boy in our group who was struggling to walk through the mountains. The smuggler was cruel—he gave him a kick and he went tumbling down the slopes. We never found his body.”

Europe faces what politicians call an existential threat from the migrant crisis.

Figures show 1.25 million asylum seekers poured into Europe in 2015—twice as many as the previous year—fleeing war and poverty in Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East and North Africa.

Many European nations launched slick media campaigns and dire warnings to dissuade would-be migrants from making the trip, but that did not slow the influx. Syrians fleeing civil war were the largest group, numbering nearly 363,000, followed by 178,200 Afghans.

Only a fraction of those Afghans—around 1,000 in total—have requested to leave Germany and return home, according to the Migration body.

Afghan officials are keen to reassure the returnees that they have a future in the country, even though pessimism abounds about the deteriorating war and a slumping economy. Those who returned on the chartered plane were greeted at the airport with signs saying: “Welcome home. Afghanistan needs you.”

Abdul Ghafoor, 24, said he paid a smuggler $7,500 to take him to Europe, a sum well beyond his means, but after three miserable months near the central German city of Frankfurt, he longed for home. “The refugee camps were uninhabitable, the toilets were filthy and every meal comprised of just jam and butter,” said Ghafoor, who is downbeat about employment prospects following his return. “We were treated like second-class refugees compared to Syrians, who were offered a lot more facilities. Afghans deserve as much as Syrians.”

Many are also leaving as countries such as Germany tighten rules that allow refugees to send for their family members. “Leaving their country is especially difficult for young male migrants because of the family separation,” said Jochen Oltmer, a migration expert at Germany’s Osnabruck University. “Some start returning home once they realize that it will be years before they can bring their families.”

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