RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi / Kian Sharifi
September 30, 2024
Every day, hundreds of Afghans, some holding their children, are deported from neighboring Iran.
Many of them crossed into Iran illegally to escape the brutal rule of the Taliban and the devastating humanitarian and economic crises gripping Afghanistan.
In the Afghan border town of Islam Qala, where the deportees are registered with the United Nations, many say they were mistreated by the Iranian authorities.
“They grab Afghan migrants and take them to camps,” Yaqub Mohammad told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi, adding that they received little food and water. “They treated us like criminals.”
Gul Lalai, another recent deportee, told Radio Azadi that he was “humiliated and beaten up” at a police station in Iran before being expelled from the country.
Iran’s deportation of Afghans has intensified in recent months, according to Taliban officials who say as many as 3,000 Afghans are deported from Iran daily. Over half a million Afghans have been forcibly evicted from Iran so far this year, Taliban officials said.
Anti-Afghan Sentiment
The rate of deportation has increased as anti-Afghan sentiment soars in Iran, which witnessed a major influx of Afghan refugees and migrants following the Taliban’s forcible seizure of power in 2021.
Earlier this month, Iranian police chief Ahmad Reza Radan said the country planned to expel some 2 million Afghans by March 2025.
The announcement came soon after Iranian lawmakers drafted a bill that would reduce the total number of migrants, mostly Afghans, living in the Islamic republic by 10 percent every year.
The United Nations’ refugee agency, UNHCR, estimates that some 4 million Afghans reside in Iran, most of them undocumented migrants. Iranian media say there are up to 8 million Afghans in the country.
Iran’s military on September 23 said it had built a wall along more than 10 kilometers of its 900-kilometer eastern border with Afghanistan, the main entry point for refugees and migrants.
Reports have recently emerged of Afghans being banned from buying subsidized bread in the southern Kerman Province, home to a large Afghan community.
Rising Harassment, Abuse
Interior Minister Eskandar Momeni said earlier this month that the issue of illegal migrants was a “sensitive” topic and warned that the government’s policies should not fan anti-migrant sentiment.
His comments came amid a rise in attacks against Afghans in Iran.
In August, a video of an Afghan teenager being violently pinned to the ground by Iranian police sparked outrage.
Afghans in Iran have long faced discrimination and harassment. But they say the pressure on them is now growing.
“We have lots of problems here,” Omid Poya, an exiled Afghan journalist living in Iran, told Radio Azadi. “Afghans here are facing discrimination and persecution.”
Hudaya Sahibzada, an Afghan human rights activist, called on Iran to stop the deportation of Afghans, particularly those at risk of retribution from the Taliban.
“The forcible deportation of Afghan refugees from Iran has intensified,” she told Radio Azadi. “Among those deported have been journalists, former soldiers, and activists. Some of them have been killed.”