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ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN; FEBRUARY 2104 .As his wife is helped by their daughters to take care of newborn baby Yassir, elderly father of five Gul Zad Khan sits wrapped in a blanket trying to keep warm in his mud built shelter. Displaced by the conflict on Afghanistan's border to a sprawling Pashtun-Abadi (Pashtun slum) near Islamabad for more than five years, the family has become destitute. “We left Bajaur when the Taliban came. I was scared for our safety and for our honour. Our house was there along with all the things we needed in life but now it no longer exists and our land has been mortgaged so that we could survive. We don't own anything and have nowhere to go. All the ways home have now been closed to us”. Finding casual labour pulling handcarts in a local vegetable market, Gul Zad earns little more than 50 or 60 Rupees a day (50 cents). “Life here is really tough. Once in a day we have food but often we go hungry. At anytime the authorities could come and evict us from here and we are too poor to afford rent. We live in fear that we will be forced from our home again. The worst thing about the war is that now we are even less secure”.. (KEYSTONE/NOOR/Alixandra Fazzina)