The Phnom Penh Post

Afghan migrants returning from Iran hit record high

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THE f low of A fg ha ns forced to leave Ira n turned into a f lood in 2018, with a record nearly 800,000 coming back as renewed US sanctions sent the Iranian currency into freefa ll and fuelled inf lation.

The 773,125 voluntary returnees and deportees was 66 per cent more than in 2017 and the trend is expected to continue, said Laurence Hart, the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration’s (IOM) chief of mission in Afghanista­n.

“The reason why people are coming back is because of the reduced economic opportunit­ies in the region . . . including Iran,” Hart said.

The 2018 figure was the highest since the IOM began systematic­ally recording the volume of returnees to Afghanista­n in 2012.

In contrast, just under 33,000 Afghans came back from Pakistan, where many have lived since fleeing the Soviet invasion of 1979.

Desperate Afghans have been paying smugglers to cross the porous border with Iran for years in search of work to support struggling families.

Smugglers can charge $300-$500 per person, turning it into a multi-million industry.

An estimated 1.5 million to two million “undocument­ed” Afghans are in Iran, the UN’s refugee agency said in September, citing government estimates.

A not her one mi l l ion a re reg istered a s refugees.

Many of the families of migrants are farmers who have been suffering through Afghanista­n’s worst drought in living memory, compoundin­g the misery caused by 17 years of conflict and underscori­ng their reliance on the remittance­s.

“There were no jobs in Afghanista­n so I had to go to Iran for work,” said Mohammad Sarwar, 39, who worked as a labourer for four months before he was arrested by Iranian police and deported.

“If I can make some money here, I will never go back to Iran,” he said at the IOM’s busy transit centre in the western Afghan city of Herat, roughly 140km from the border.

Abdul Hakim, 28, had just found a job in Iran after a month of searching when he was detained and kicked out. He faces an uncertain future as he tries to find a way to support his wife and three young children.

“The situation is very bad in Afghanista­n,” said Hakim, who comes from the northweste­rn province of Badghis, which has been hit hard by the drought.

Some, like 75-year-old Naseruddin, who only gave one name, have returned to Afghanista­n penniless.

“I was there for five months but the police caught me,” he said.

“I have no money on me.”

Nearly half of the returnees – 358,065 – vol- unteered to come back to Afghanista­n after watching their earnings shrivel up and jobs disappear.

Iran’s ria l lost around half its va lue against t he dollar last year after US President Donald Trump pulled out of the 2015 nuclear deal.

That move triggered a reimpositi­on of tough sanctions on the Islamic republic, which have e x a c e r b a t e d t h e c o u nt r y ’s e c o nom i c problems.

 ?? AREF KARIMI/AFP ?? The flow of Afghans forced to leave Iran turned into a flood last year.
AREF KARIMI/AFP The flow of Afghans forced to leave Iran turned into a flood last year.
 ?? AFP ?? Eight years after the uprising that toppled the dictatorsh­ip, bitterness among Tunisian youth is beginning to replace hope in the North African country once praised as a model of democratic transition, with young graduates struggling with increasing inflation and unemployme­nt rates.
AFP Eight years after the uprising that toppled the dictatorsh­ip, bitterness among Tunisian youth is beginning to replace hope in the North African country once praised as a model of democratic transition, with young graduates struggling with increasing inflation and unemployme­nt rates.

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