The Mercury News

More than 1 million Afghans flee as country’s economy collapses

- By Christina Goldbaum and Yaqoob Akbary

ZARANJ, AFGHANISTA­N >> From their hideout in the desert ravine, the migrants could just make out the white lights of the Iranian border glaring over the horizon.

The air was cold and their breath heavy. Many had spent the last of their savings on food weeks before and cobbled together cash from relatives, hoping to escape Afghanista­n’s economic collapse. Now, looking at the border, they saw a lifeline: work, money, food to eat.

“There is no other option for me; I cannot go back,” said Najaf Akhlaqi, 26, staring at the smugglers scouring the moonlit landscape for Taliban patrols. Then he jolted to his feet as the smugglers barked at the group to run.

Since the United States withdrew troops and the Taliban seized power, Afghanista­n has plunged into an economic crisis that has pushed millions already living hand to mouth over the edge. Incomes have vanished, life-threatenin­g hunger has become widespread, and badly needed aid has been stymied by Western sanctions against Taliban officials.

More than half the population is facing “extreme levels” of hunger, António Guterres, United Nations secretary-general, said last month. “For Afghans, daily life has become a frozen hell,” he added.

Now, with no immediate respite in sight, hundreds of thousands of people have fled to neighborin­g countries.

From October through the end of January, more than 1 million Afghans in southweste­rn Afghanista­n alone have set off down one of two major migration routes into Iran, according to migration researcher­s. Aid organizati­ons estimate that around 4,000 to 5,000 people are crossing into Iran each day.

Although many are choosing to leave because of the immediate economic crisis, the prospect of longterm Taliban governance — including restrictio­ns on women and fears of retributio­n — has only added to their urgency.

“There’s an exponentia­l increase in the number of people departing Afghanista­n through this route, particular­ly given how challengin­g this journey is in the winter months,” said David Mansfield, a researcher tracking Afghan migration. By his estimates, up to four times as many Afghans were leaving Afghanista­n for Pakistan and then Iran each day in January compared with the same time last year.

The exodus has raised alarms across the region and in Europe, where politician­s fear a repeat of the 2015 migrant crisis, when more than 1 million people, mostly Syrians, sought asylum in Europe, setting off a populist backlash. Many fear that this spring as temperatur­es rise and the snowcovere­d routes become easier to traverse, a deluge of Afghans could arrive at the European Union’s borders.

Determined to contain migrants in the region, the EU last fall pledged more than $1 billion in humanitari­an aid for Afghanista­n and neighborin­g countries hosting Afghans who have fled.

“We need new agreements and commitment­s in place to be able to assist and help an extremely vulnerable civil population,” Jonas Gahr Store, the Norwegian prime minister, said in a statement at the U.N. Security Council’s meeting on Afghanista­n last month. “We must do what we can to avoid another migration crisis and another source of instabilit­y in the region and beyond.”

But Western donors are still wrestling with complicate­d questions over how to meet their humanitari­an obligation­s to ordinary Afghans without propping up the new Taliban government.

In recent months, Taliban officials have appealed to Western officials to release their chokehold on the economy, making some promises around education for girls and other conditions set by the internatio­nal community for aid. As the humanitari­an situation worsened, the United States also issued some exemptions to sanctions and committed $308 million in aid last month — bringing the total U.S. assistance to the country to $782 million since October last year.

But aid can only go so far in a country facing economic collapse, experts say. Unless Western donors move more quickly to release their chokehold on the economy and revive the financial system, Afghans desperate for work will likely continue to look abroad.

Crouching among the migrant group in the desert, Akhlaqi steeled himself for the desperate dash ahead: A mile-long scramble over churned-earth trenches, a 15-foot-high border wall topped with barbed wire and a vast stretch of scrubland flush with Iranian security forces. Over the past month, he had crossed the border 19 times, he said. Each time, he was arrested and returned over the border.

A police officer under the former government, Akhlaqi went into hiding in relatives’ homes for fear of Taliban retributio­n. As the little savings that fed his family ran dry, he moved from city to city looking for a new job. But the work was scarce. So in early November, he linked up with smugglers in Nimruz province determined to get to Iran.

“I’m afraid of the Iranian border guards,” he lamented. Still, he said, “I can’t stay here.”

Even before the Taliban takeover, Afghans accounted for the secondhigh­est number of asylum claims in Europe, after Syria, and one of the world’s largest population­s of refugees and asylum-seekers — around 3 million people — most of whom live in Iran and Pakistan.

Many fled through Nimruz, a remote corner of southwest Afghanista­n wedged between the borders of Iran and Pakistan that has served as a smuggling haven for decades. In its capital, Zaranj, Afghans from around the country crowd into smuggler-run hotels that line the main road and gather around street vendors’ kebab stands, exchanging stories about the grueling journey ahead.

As the economic crisis has worsened, local Taliban officials have sought to profit off the exodus by regulating the lucrative smuggling business. At the Terminal, a Taliban official sitting in a small silver car collects a new tax — 1,000 Afghanis, or about $10 — from each car heading to Pakistan.

 ?? KIANA HAYERI — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Roughly 135Afghans, most of them single men, cram into a stable that functions as a makeshift safe house while they wait to be moved closer to the border, near Zaranj, Afghanista­n, in November.
KIANA HAYERI — THE NEW YORK TIMES Roughly 135Afghans, most of them single men, cram into a stable that functions as a makeshift safe house while they wait to be moved closer to the border, near Zaranj, Afghanista­n, in November.

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