The Denver Post

Tensions on the rise with Iran, Taliban

- By Mehdi Fattahi and Isabel Debre

» The Taliban members who killed her activist husband offered Zahra Husseini a deal: Marry one of us, and you’ll be safe.

Husseini, 31, decided to flee. Through swaths of lawless flatlands she and her two small children trekked by foot, motorcycle and truck until reaching Iran.

As Afghanista­n plunged into economic crisis after the United States withdrew troops and the Taliban seized power, the 572-mile long border with Iran became a lifeline for Afghans who piled into smugglers’ pickups in desperate search of money and work.

But in recent weeks the desert crossing, long a dangerous corner of the world, has become a growing source of tension as an estimated 5,000 Afghans traverse it each day and the neighbors — erstwhile enemies that trade fuel, share water and have a tortured history — navigate an increasing­ly charged relationsh­ip.

In past weeks, skirmishes erupted between Taliban and Iranian border guards. Afghans in three cities rallied against Iran. Demonstrat­ors hurled stones and set fires outside an Iranian Consulate. A fatal stabbing spree, allegedly by an Afghan migrant, at Iran’s holiest shrine sent shock waves through the country.

Political analysts say even as both nations do not want an escalation, longsmolde­ring hostilitie­s risk spiraling out of control.

“You have one of the world’s worst-simmering refugee crises just chugging along on a daily pace and historical enmity,” said Andrew Watkins, senior Afghanista­n expert at the United States Institute of Peace. “Earthquake­s will happen.”

The perils are personal for Afghans slipping across the border like Husseini. Since the Taliban takeover, Iran has escalated its deportatio­ns of Afghan migrants, according to the U.N. migration agency, warning that its sanctionsh­it economy cannot handle the influx.

In the first three months of this year, Iran’s deportatio­ns jumped 60% each month, said Ashley Carl, deputy chief of the agency’s Afghanista­n mission. Many of the 251,000 returned from Iran this year bear the wounds and scars of the arduous trip, he said, surviving car accidents, gunshots and other travails.

Roshangol Hakimi, a 35year-old who fled to Iran after the Taliban takeover, said smugglers held her and her 9-year-old daughter hostage over a week until her relatives paid ransom.

“They would feed us with

polluted water and hard, stale bread,” she said. “We were dying.”

The lucky ones land in the jumble of Tehran, squeezing into dank and crowded alleyways. Iran estimates at least a million Afghans have sought refuge in the country over the last eight months.

Like many, Husseini lives in legal limbo, vulnerable to harassment and exploitati­on. Her boss at the tailor’s shop refuses to pay her salary. Her landlord threatens to kick her out. She can barely cobble together enough cash to feed her children.

“We have nothing and nowhere to go,” she said from a cramped room in southern Tehran.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzade­h lamented last month that “waves of displaced Afghans cannot continue to Iran” because Iran’s “capacities are limited.” Iran’s youth unemployme­nt hovers more than 23%. Iran’s currency, the rial, has shriveled to less than 50% of its value since 2018.

 ?? Vahid Salemi, The Associated Press ?? Afghan refugee Zahra Husseini and her children Salehe, center, and Shahrzad sit in their room in a poor suburb of Tehran, Iran, on April 21.
Vahid Salemi, The Associated Press Afghan refugee Zahra Husseini and her children Salehe, center, and Shahrzad sit in their room in a poor suburb of Tehran, Iran, on April 21.

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