Los Angeles Times

Sanctions-racked Iran is no longer a refuge for Afghans

- By Shashank Bengali, Ramin Mostaghim and Sultan Faizy

TEHRAN — Rahman Kamali, a 30-year-old Afghan who sells vegetables in the Iranian capital, has found a new use for his pickup besides hauling spinach and radishes.

Nearly once a week, another young Afghan migrant climbs into the passenger seat of Kamali’s cream-colored truck and loads his few belongings — mattress, blanket, carpet, maybe a small TV set — into the truck bed.

For about $5, half the usual fare, Kamali drives the men — and they are always young unmarried men — to a depot in the poor southeaste­rn corner of Tehran, where buses leave for the Afghan border.

They are part of a gathering exodus of nearly half a million Afghan migrants who have returned from Iran since January, trading economic turmoil and a currency crisis in the Islamic Republic for the violence and uncertaint­y of their home country.

President Trump’s sanctions on Iran are spreading gloom across a troubled and drought-stricken region, exacerbati­ng the country’s long-standing problems of inflation and fiscal mismanagem­ent by sparking a run on the currency, the rial, which has lost more than half its value over the last year.

Trump’s withdrawal from a nuclear agreement Iran signed in 2015 with six world powers triggered the renewal of harsh U.S. sanctions, the first of which went into effect this month. A second round of sanctions targeting the oil and financial sectors is due in November.

As bad as Iran’s economy has been for years, it remained a magnet for an estimated 3 million Afghan migrants seeking jobs or a refuge from war. That has begun to reverse, with more than 20,000 Afghans returning from Iran every week, according to the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration.

“The decline of the rial is cutting our purchasing power,” said the stubblefac­ed Kamali, who is married with three children.

Although he has no immediate plans to leave Iran, he said the currency crisis was hitting Afghan migrants as hard as Iranians.

Half the Afghans in Iran are there illegally and most are employed in the informal economy — as laborers on constructi­on sites and hawkers of food and agricultur­al goods — leaving them even more vulnerable to the downturn.

A regionwide drought and the economic crisis have dramatical­ly reduced the demand for such unregulate­d work as Iranians curtail their spending, watch the value of their savings dissolve and stash their money in foreign currency to guard against the country’s sliding rial.

The small monthly savings that laborers would send home every month to Afghanista­n, where the economy is heavily dependent on foreign remittance­s, have also begun to dry up.

Sayed Aziz Alawi, a 22year-old Afghan, traveled to Iran with his brother five years ago so they could find work as laborers; both returned to Kabul six weeks ago. Alawi watched his daily wage of 400,000 rials — which was worth about $10 a year ago — plunge in value to less than $3.50.

“We couldn’t survive,” said Alawi. He and his brother cut down on expenses, dropped chicken from their diet because it grew too costly, and still found subsistenc­e nearly impossible.

“I couldn’t earn money for my family, nor could I afford my own daily expenses if I didn’t work for a day,” he said. “I had to borrow money from my friends most of the time. In the past few months, I lived hand-tomouth.”

Alawi, who said nearly all his friends had left Afghanista­n to seek work in Iran or Turkey, added that he faced discrimina­tion from his Iranian employers, who looked down on Afghans.

He worked on one constructi­on project for a year but wasn’t paid. His boss said he was free to file a complaint, but because Alawi had entered Iran on a onemonth visa and overstayed illegally, he could only bite his tongue and look for another job.

Finally, he and his brother turned themselves over to Iranian police and were deported.

His father, Sayed Hasan Alawi, who earns a small income as a social worker, said it had been more than a year since his sons sent money home.

“The money they’re earning in a month there was much less than what they could earn here,” he said. “I told both of them that it’s better to return home. I’d consider sending them back if the value of Iran’s currency rises again — otherwise it’s useless.”

But like many who have returned to Afghanista­n, Alawi and his brother are jobless now. Afghanista­n’s economy has continued to struggle amid widening attacks by Taliban and Islamic State militants and one of the worst droughts in decades threatenin­g food shortages in two-thirds of the country.

“Less money coming from working males who are instead returning home to no job — combined with drought and resource competitio­n with other returnees — will have a significan­t impact on the Afghan economy,” said Nicholas Bishop, an emergency response officer with the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration in Kabul.

Officials say the growing ranks of jobless males will make food shortages worse and could potentiall­y fuel conflict.

Among the returnees are Afghans who went to Iran as laborers but ended up being sent to Syria — some in effect drafted, others signing up for religious reasons — to fight in a Shiite Muslim militia known as the Fatemiyoun Division, trained by Iran’s elite Revolution­ary Guard. Mostly members of the Hazara ethnic minority, who faced religious discrimina­tion and persecutio­n in Afghanista­n, these fighters enjoyed better incomes and residency privileges than most Afghan migrants in Iran.

With the war against Islamic State in Syria winding down, Iran is laying off members of the Fatemiyoun Division, which is believed to have included up to 50,000 Afghans. Ahmad Shuja, an Afghan analyst and editor in chief of the Georgetown Public Policy Review, said that although these men would qualify to remain in Iran, many are deciding it is not worth it.

The addition of large numbers of ex-fighters presents an economic and security challenge for Afghanista­n, Shuja said.

“They will be looking for employment, failing which it is not inconceiva­ble that they might use their newfound military experience,” Shuja said. “It is possible that this will first manifest itself in local violence and crime that could conceivabl­y escalate.”

Farhad Omari, a 20-yearold ethnic Uzbek from Afghanista­n who works as a plumber’s apprentice in Tehran, said he and his compatriot­s had nowhere to go.

“We, the Afghan youth, are squeezed by pressures — the violence of the Taliban and Islamic State in our land, the decline of the rial robbing us of our meager savings in Iran,” he said.

Although he planned to remain in Iran for the time being, sending money home to his family in eastern Afghanista­n’s Paktia province, Omari said, “If the rial continues to fall, I will also go back.”

‘I couldn’t earn money for my family, nor could I afford my own daily expenses if I didn’t work for a day.’ — Sayed Aziz Alawi, an Afghan who went to Iran five years ago to find work as a laborer

 ?? Hoshang Hashimi AFP/Getty Images ?? AN AFGHAN coming back from Iran, right, exchanges rials in Herat province. Nearly half a million Afghans have returned from Iran since January.
Hoshang Hashimi AFP/Getty Images AN AFGHAN coming back from Iran, right, exchanges rials in Herat province. Nearly half a million Afghans have returned from Iran since January.
 ?? Hoshang Hashimi AFP/Getty Images ?? YOUNG AFGHAN MEN return home from Iran this month, trading that nation’s economic turmoil and currency crisis — caused in part by U.S. sanctions — for the violence and uncertaint­y of Afghanista­n.
Hoshang Hashimi AFP/Getty Images YOUNG AFGHAN MEN return home from Iran this month, trading that nation’s economic turmoil and currency crisis — caused in part by U.S. sanctions — for the violence and uncertaint­y of Afghanista­n.

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