Pakistani refugees begin returning home

Published: Friday, July 10, 2009 10:54 p.m. MDT
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There's no electricity in Sultanwas, and the sole source of water is a well with a hand pump. Craters from artillery shells and bombs have ravaged fields where tomatoes and cucumbers once grew. Shereen said food is scarce, and the government is slow in delivering new supplies.

While the scale of destruction in Sultanwas is exceptional, many of the residents' frustrations are not. In nearby villages that escaped the fighting largely unscathed, residents said they also experience power outages and food shortages. Many ran through their savings supporting their families while away; they are now counting on government handouts to get by.

Electricity has been restored to some villages, and officials say it should be back on in Sultanwas in the next few days.

The government also has vowed to provide for those who return as well as those still stuck in camps until the end of the year.

"We will ensure that every family that leaves (the camps) gets cash support from the government," said Lt. Gen. Nadeem Ahmad, who heads an army support group to look after the displaced.

Although the army says Buner and Swat are now largely free of Taliban fighters, security questions remain.

In the village of Pir Baba, the dusty main market street was empty, and most storefronts were shuttered.

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At one of the few produce shops open, Asad Khan was selling bananas, mangoes, tomatoes and red onions. Khan, 17, returned to Pir Baba this week with his parents and six siblings from a refugee camp about two hours south.

"We don't see any danger at the moment here," he said, but noted that business was slow, despite the influx of returnees.

"People are not coming to the market area because they are still apprehensive," he said.

Tufaiel Ahmad, 16, said he left his parents, four sisters and three brothers at a refugee camp to reopen his father's snack shop near the town's shrine to a local Muslim mystic.

"This street was not like it is now," he said, playing with the scales used to weigh walnuts and almonds. "You couldn't pass, because of the crowd of people. We had great business in those days.

"The problem was because of the Taliban. Now that they've left, we hope normal life will return."

Military officials acknowledge that pockets of resistance remain in northeast Buner and parts of Swat. Officials insist that troops will finish them off in the coming days.

Many residents believe Taliban fighters simply hid their weapons and melted back into the civilian population, waiting for the right moment to resurface as they have after previous Pakistani crackdowns.

This time, the army acknowledges it is going to have to retain a presence in Buner and Swat.

"The army will remain until the situation feels comfortable and there is no threat," said Lt. Col. Waseem Shahid, a spokesman for an army group helping refugees in the region.

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Image
B.k.bangash, Associated Press

Rehmat Bibi looks from her house in Sultanwas, Pakistan, after returning from a refugee camp.

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