E/CN.4/2005/85/Add.2
page 10
25.
Opportunities for higher education were closing in 2003 and Afghans living in refugee
camps told the mission that they had very few opportunities to attend university. Although it
was decreed that even undocumented children would be permitted to attend school, an NGO
representative mentioned that some local authorities continued to deny refugee children entrance
to public schools. Representatives of Afghan communities also informed the Special Rapporteur
that Iranian authorities were cutting educational assistance to the 250,000 Afghan children in
Iran. In the past, Afghan families had to pay one third of the education fees but as of the end
of 2003, Afghan families would have to pay the totality of the fees.
26.
The authorities also progressively reduced assistance for health care throughout 2004.
For instance, it became obligatory to subscribe to health insurance schemes at full cost. From
September 2004 school fees were compulsory for all Afghan children.
27.
If an Afghan marries an Iranian woman, their children have no legal status because the
presence of the Afghan man is irregular and the marriage is not recognized officially. The
Special Rapporteur was told that in Khourastan Province, over 10,000 children are facing this
situation. At the same time, other groups, after 10-15 years’ stay in Iran, have now integrated
into Iranian society to the extent that they are reluctant to uproot themselves and their children
born in Iran and face an uncertain future in Afghanistan.
Torbat-e-Jam Refugee Camp
28.
Built in 1994, Torbat-e-Jam refugee camp looks like a housing complex; with wide
shrub-lined avenues, several parks, a football field, a gym and a bazaar, it is often described
as one of the best refugee camps in the world. Currently, it hosts some 5,500 refugees
(2,623 women and 2,817 men) living in 928 houses. Some 1,500 students attend the camp
school, which has 170 Iranian teachers for primary and secondary levels. Forty-two students
from the camp are currently pursuing their studies at Universities of Mashed and Tehran.
29.
An advisory council composed of refugees living in the camp manages all aspects of life
through different committees established for that purpose, such as the Committee on Health,
Cultural Affairs and Development.
30.
Residents in the camp speak Dari and most of them have been living there for
seven years or more. They enjoy free access to education, health facilities and basic food. They
also have the opportunity of earning a living within the camp by setting up small businesses, or
outside the camp, working mainly in agriculture and on construction sites.
31.
Most of the young residents living in the camp do not have a clear idea of whether they
would like to stay in Iran or go to Afghanistan. The majority of them never lived in their country
of origin and feel that prospects in Iran and in Afghanistan are rather limited. In Iran, a number
of professions are not available to them and economic conditions in Afghanistan do not provide
them with opportunities in terms of employment or earning a living.