'); //-->
Back home
America retaliates

SectionsTodaySponsored by:
-Expanded
 coverage

-Wire updates
-About anthrax

Globe archives
Looking for a story about the US war on terror? Use this search form:
Search for:
Search from:

Full archive form
Search help
Week of Sept. 11
Commemorative Globe front pages

How to help
Afghan charities
Relief funds

Showing support
Flag flying guide
Flag wallpaper
Printable flag

Memorials
Post a tribute to someone killed in the attack or write condolences to all victims in the National Book of Remembrance.

Messages
A changed America?
Condolences
Acts of patriotism

Investigation
Anyone with information regarding the attacks should call the FBI at this number:
866-483-5137


Leave a tip online
FBI website

Tax help
The IRS has set up a website and a toll-free number to help people having trouble with taxes as a result of the Sept. 11 attacks.


Call 866-562-5227, weekdays, 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Visit website
Biggest one-day flood of refugees since start of air campaign pours into Pakistan

By Laura King, Associated Press, 10/20/01

   
 TODAY'S TOP STORIES

Military
US checking hospital charge

World
Taliban claims hospital struck
Pakistan arrests anti-US activists Russia's anthrax under lockup

 TODAY'S GLOBE

US ready to increase raids
Trouble seen over victims' fund
Troops' loyalties shift
Anti-US rage boils in Pakistan

More coverage in:
Nation | World
City & Region

Complete archive of stories

 REALVIDEO

New England Cable News

Security tight at Pilgrim plant
Maine Guard troops head out
Benefit concert in D.C.

Archive of RealVideo

 PHOTO GALLERIES

Life aboard US Navy vessels
Most wanted terrorists
Scenes from Afghanistan
Archive of photo galleries

 THE RETALIATION

The battlefield
A grim land ravaged by war

The enemy
Afghans are tough, determined

The aftermath
Replacing the Taliban

Maps
Diagram of the attacks
Overview of the region

Graphics
Weaponry used in strikes
A look at US aircraft carriers
Satellite-guided weapons
Bomb covers 10 football fields
New bomb used for first time

 THE SUSPECTS

The 19 suspected hijackers
A look at Osama bin Laden
Photos: Bin Laden's terror trail
FBI's 'most-wanted' terrorists

 THE ATTACK

Sept. 11, 2001
A reconstruction of the day in graphics, photos, and text.

 MESSAGE BOARDS

Earlier boards
Has America changed forever?
Condolences
Acts of patriotism

QUETTA, Pakistan -- In the biggest single-day refugee influx of the two-week U.S.-led air assault on Afghanistan, an estimated 5,000 people -- most of them ragged, frightened and bringing with them only what they could carry -- streamed through a desolate border crossing into Pakistan on Saturday.

Crying children, women covered head-to-toe in veils and dust, hobbling old men and a few younger ones swathed in bandages -- all joined in an exodus from Afghanistan that humanitarian officials said represented only a tiny fraction of the number who might flee in coming weeks if fighting intensifies and hunger grows sharper and more widespread.

This human flood at the Chaman border crossing came despite the fact that the frontier -- officially, anyway -- remained closed to refugees.

Pakistan insisted that only those with valid travel documents were being allowed in. But large numbers were believed to be traveling with papers either procured from relatives in Pakistan or obtained from smugglers -- at a price.

Hardship cases were allowed through at the discretion of Pakistani border guards -- and Taliban authorities on the other side. Only a few fighting-age men could be seen among the crowds; the vast majority were women, children and the elderly.

They passed through in groups divided by gender; before they crossed over, the Taliban, seen only as distant figures moving under their pure-white flag, first separated men from women.

In the chaos, some were separated from family members. A little boy, perhaps 4, sobbed while some Pakistani guards tried to console him. His father had been either held on the other side, or opted not to try to cross.

Many of those crossing were from Kandahar, the nearest major Afghan city, 125 miles to the northwest. A Taliban stronghold, the city has been pounded repeatedly by airstrikes since the U.S.-led bombardment began on Oct. 7.

The air campaign was launched after Afghanistan's Islamic rulers refused to hand over Osama bin Laden, the chief suspect in the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. The United States says civilians are not being targeted, but more and more refugees are reporting casualties in residential neighborhoods.

"A lot of people are injured in Kandahar," said a bandaged man crossing at Chaman, who identified himself only as Abdullah. "The Taliban are off someplace safe -- it is the ordinary people who are suffering."

Because those crossing over are not officially designated as refugees, they are not entitled to benefits from international agencies or the Pakistani government. Most, in keeping with tribal tradition that calls for sheltering even distant kin, are living with relatives on the Pakistani side in already crowded shantytowns and refugee camps.

"We were told of one family that had 26 people living in a single room," said Fatoumata Kaba, a spokeswoman for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, who witnessed Saturday's influx.

Many refugees said they had sold all they had for a chance to escape Afghanistan, even knowing that their future in Pakistan is an uncertain one.

"It was impossible for us to live there," said Gul Mohammed, 46, who arrived with his wife and three children. He sold his house in Kandahar for far less he had paid to raise money to start a new life here.

Bashir Ahmad, 29, another Kandahar man, said he could not afford to buy even a crust of bread to feed his family. "I am thinking to beg for my children," he said.

On the other side of the border, an estimated 10,000 people were camped in the open, hoping to cross in coming days. Kaba, the U.N. spokeswoman, said that estimate had come from Pakistani border guards. She and other monitors have not been allowed to get close enough to look into the no-man's land where those waiting are camped.

"These are people in very bad condition -- in poor health, with very few belongings," she said. "Some are sick, some are hungry, and some have sold everything they had."

Mohammed, the Kandahar man crossing on Saturday with his three children, described the family's wait to make their way across.

"For three days we waited under the open sky," he said. "We had no water, little food and shelter."

Although the borders were closed even before the bombardment began, the frontier is impossible to seal, and refugees are slipping across, many paying smugglers to guide them along mule tracks and footpaths. Some are being charged 2,000 Pakistani rupees, or $40 -- in a country where the average annual income is barely $200 a year.

Saturday's number was the biggest one-day crossing to date -- exceeding the arrival Friday of 3,500 people through Chaman -- but much larger influxes likely lie ahead, humanitarian officials said.

If the borders were opened, said Kaba, the UNHCR spokeswoman, up to 300,000 people might flood in "over a very short period of time" and arrivals could eventually total 1 million. Pakistan, already home to more than 2 million refugees, has appealed to the international community for help in caring for them.

UNHCR was planning to send several truckloads of supplies to Chaman on Sunday, including food and blankets. They also hoped to bring in medical teams to aid anyone needing immediate care.

 
 

  Save 50% on home delivery of The Boston Globe

© Copyright 2001 Boston Globe Electronic Publishing Inc.

| Advertise | Contact us | Privacy policy |