Afghan refugees headache in Iran as waves of displaced continue
Despite the common interests that
the Iranian regime and the Taliban movement have in Afghanistan following the
latter’s rise to power in mid-August, the movement’s arrival to power has
caused repercussions that represent pressure on Tehran, on top of which is the
daily exodus of thousands of refugees to Iranian lands to escape the new
regime.
Conflicting
positions
The Iranian regime’s position on
Afghan refugees varied. With the beginning of the movement’s rise in
mid-August, Iran announced its readiness to shelter the refugees. The Director
General of Border Affairs at the Iranian Ministry of Interior, Hussein Qassemi,
said that his country was ready to accommodate Afghan refugees in the provinces
of Razavi Khorasan, South Khorasan, and Sistan and Baluchestan, which border
Afghanistan. He confirmed that the Iranian Ministry of Interior had prepared
two months ago for the establishment of temporary camps to house Afghan
refugees in the event they entered the country.
However, the Iranian position
changed rapidly after a few days of these statements, as the Iranian Ministry
of Interior announced that it would not allow the entry of Afghan refugees,
noting that it would not allow the establishment of camps to receive them.
Qassemi said that an executive order
was issued to the aforementioned provinces to return any Afghan who tries to
enter Iranian territory.
Regarding the number of Afghan
refugees, the UNHCR said that Pakistan and Iran received the largest number of
Afghan refugees last year, with 1.5 million fleeing to Pakistan and 780,000 to
Iran. Germany came in third place by receiving 180,000 Afghan refugees, while
Turkey received 130,000.
Continuing
waves of refugees
Despite Iran’s refusal to receive
Afghan refugees, the waves of displaced are still continuing, as the Norwegian
Refugee Council said in a recently issued report that between four and five
thousand Afghans have crossed daily into Iran after the Taliban took control,
calling for increased support for Tehran to enable it to provide humanitarian
needs.
Norwegian Refugee Council
Secretary-General Jan Egeland said in a statement during his visit to Iran this
week that thousands of exhausted women, children and men cross from Afghanistan
to Iran every day in search of safety, adding, “We cannot expect Iran to host
this number of Afghans with such limited support from the international
community.”
According to the report, Iran is one
of the countries hosting the most refugees in the world, especially Afghans, as
their number was estimated before the current events at about 3.5 million,
noting that between four and five thousand Afghans daily cross the border
separating the two countries, which extends for about 900 km.
The report indicated that about
300,000 people have crossed into Iran since the Taliban took control of Kabul
in August, which coincided with the withdrawal of US forces after a presence of
nearly two decades.