The Washington Post Sunday

Returning Afghans receive unexpected Taliban welcome

New government portrays itself as in control as country takes in thousands deported by Pakistan

- BY RICK NOACK AND HAQ NAWAZ KHAN Nawaz Khan reported from Landi Kotal and Peshawar, Pakistan. Lutfullah Qasimyar at the Torkham border crossing, Afghanista­n, and Shaiq Hussain in Islamabad, Pakistan, contribute­d to this report.

torkham crossing, afghanista­n — At Pakistan’s main border crossing with northern Afghanista­n, the narrow path into an uncertain future runs between two rusty iron fences and ends beneath a black-and-white flag of the Taliban-run government.

Many of the returning Afghan refugees who arrived here earlier this month expected the worst as they stepped onto muddy Afghan soil amid torrential rain.

Caught up in a major deportatio­n drive and forced to leave their homes in Pakistan, some had never been to the war-ravaged country their parents were born in. Others assumed they would barely recognize the cities they fled after the Taliban takeover in August 2021, where schools are now closed for many girls and music is prohibited.

But as they entered their transforme­d country, many refugees appeared puzzled. There was a poster wishing them a “good and comfortabl­e life.” Rifle-wielding soldiers handed out food and wore bright garlands to celebrate the refugees’ return. Trucks stood ready to transport the returnees and their belongings to sprawling tent cities where 30,000 have found shelter and most families receive a $140 cash payment from the government.

“We wish we had returned sooner,” said Sardar Ali, 35, a laborer who was born in Pakistan to Afghan parents and who most recently worked in Rawalpindi.

Over 300,000 people have returned to Afghanista­n in recent weeks, according to Afghan authoritie­s. Pakistani officials say they want to make more than 1 million additional Afghans move back in the coming months.

Pakistan portrays the deportatio­n drive as long overdue. For decades, the country has hosted millions of Afghans who arrived over several waves of migration beginning in the 1970s. Over 600,000 additional refugees fled to Pakistan in the wake of the Taliban takeover in 2021.

The deportatio­ns come amid mounting frustratio­n in Islamabad with a surge in attacks in Pakistan that officials largely blame on religious militants suspected of hiding in Afghanista­n’s rugged border mountains. By implicitly threatenin­g to overwhelm Afghanista­n with returnees, the Pakistani campaign appears designed to pressure the Afghan leadership to cracking down on the militants, analysts and humanitari­an workers say. Afghan officials deny they are harboring the militants.

Pakistan’s deportatio­n efforts may actually play into the hands of the Taliban-run government. It now has a rare opportunit­y to present itself as a government capable of managing a major humanitari­an crisis and willing to welcome returnees, including those who fled the group’s 20-year armed campaign to seize control of Afghanista­n.

While United Nations agencies, including the World Food Program and the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM), also provide assistance at the border, the Taliban is portraying itself as in control. The makeshift paths in the main refugee camp are lined with the Taliban’s Islamic Emirate flags. Soldiers on pickup trucks patrol the tent cities, where temporary mobile phone towers have been set up and Afghan carriers hand out free SIM cards.

“We pursued jihad so that we would one day be able to serve our people,” said Mohammad Adnan Junudi, 38, the military official in charge of reception operations on the Afghan side of Torkham, who joined the Taliban over a decade ago and says he was at one point jailed by U.S. forces. He called on all Afghans in Pakistan to return to their country. “The last few days have allowed us to prove who we really are.”

But the coming days could prove challengin­g. Forced to swap the tropical and subtropica­l climate of southern Pakistan for the frigid winters in the Hindu Kush, some of those who grew up in Pakistan are facing the first real winter in their lives. “We were born in Pakistan; we got married there,” said Mohammad Wali, 28, who used to live in Punjab province in Pakistan. “Why didn’t they at least let us stay until the end of the winter?”

Pakistan has in recent weeks responded to internatio­nal criticism by making some concession­s, saying that it will spare individual­s who are waiting for resettleme­nt in countries other than Afghanista­n. But if Pakistan moves ahead with the deportatio­n of most other undocument­ed Afghan refugees, it could still put an enormous strain on Afghanista­n’s fragile economy and on a government that seeks to maintain tight control.

Many of the refugees who arrive in Torkham are laborers with few possession­s. Some ran small food stalls or worked in brick factories. Some are women who were forced to leave Pakistan in a rush without their husbands.

Hadisa, clad in a blue burqa, said her husband was rounded up and arrested before they could leave for Afghanista­n. The 35year-old arrived in Torkham accompanie­d by a group of neighbors. But worried about traveling farther without a male relative, she has decided to wait for her husband near the crossing.

Abdul Nasir Kakar, who works for the IOM in Afghanista­n, said 98 percent of those who arrive in Torkham are vulnerable and “in dire need of humanitari­an assistance.”

Very few of the families arriving here include children who have gone to school in Pakistan, where educationa­l facilities often are lacking in Afghan refugees’ neighborho­ods. But the promising welcome that refugees say they have received in Afghanista­n may raise exaggerate­d expectatio­ns. Sardar Ali, the laborer from Rawalpindi, said he had high hopes that his 3-year-old daughter may eventually receive education. He was surprised to hear that girls are banned from attending school beyond sixth grade.

On the Pakistani side of the border, anxiety is running high, especially in Afghan neighborho­ods that have so far been largely spared by immigratio­n raids.

For years, teachers in Pakistan tried to keep their Afghan students’ spirits up by installing inspiratio­nal slogans at the entrances of their mud brick school buildings. “Education is the Kindling of a Flame,” reads a sign at the entrance of one of these schools in Peshawar, a city in northweste­rn Pakistan. These days, few students feel comforted by it.

Sixteen-year-old Gul Zameena Fazal, who grew up in Pakistan and still studies at the school, said it was her father, an uneducated driver, who encouraged her to seek a degree. “Seeing female students in Peshawar inspired him and it was his dream that I get a proper education,” she said.

Fazal said she wept when she learned that schools and universiti­es shut for many girls in Afghanista­n, and she is horrified by the possibilit­y of having to move to the country. Fazal was too young during her only visit to Afghanista­n a decade ago to be able to remember it.

Their teachers are uncertain how to help. Salbia Ahmadi, who teaches Pashto language classes at the school, said she is herself afraid of being expelled to Afghanista­n. “Without women’s education, Afghanista­n is being pushed back into the darkness,” she said.

After it seized power, the Taliban issued a general amnesty for former officials in the U.S.-backed government. But human rights officials say Afghan refugees may have reason to be concerned about a forced return to their home country. The United Nations has documented over 200 extrajudic­ial killings of former Afghan officials and members of the armed forces since the takeover in 2021.

The Taliban-run government rejects these concerns. “Our supreme leader told us not to bother anyone for anything and we will follow instructio­ns, even if we pay with our lives for it,” said Adnan Junudi, the military official in charge of reception operations in Torkham.

The Afghan authoritie­s say they are working on a plan to reintegrat­e the returnees into the labor market. And across Afghanista­n, the authoritie­s want to establish communitie­s where returnees can settle — a plan that has already raised concerns that it may be used by the government to move returnees of the Pashtun ethnic group into areas where they so far are a minority.

Bakhtiar Khan, a 24-year-old refugee, said he’s willing to give Afghanista­n a chance. “But if we see that life is getting harder and harder, me and my friends will definitely think about ways to move abroad again,” he said.

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 ?? PHOTOS BY ELISE BLANCHARD FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? At the Torkham border crossing in Afghanista­n on Nov. 9, 20-year-old Zarlakht, who has returned with her family from Pakistan, sits on a bus that is bound for a refugee camp.
PHOTOS BY ELISE BLANCHARD FOR THE WASHINGTON POST At the Torkham border crossing in Afghanista­n on Nov. 9, 20-year-old Zarlakht, who has returned with her family from Pakistan, sits on a bus that is bound for a refugee camp.
 ?? ?? FROM TOP: Refugees who were deported by Pakistan ask Taliban soldiers for informatio­n at the Torkham crossing Nov. 11. A truck with 55 returning Afghans arrives Nov. 10 at the main Taliban-run refugee camp near the border crossing. One woman aboard the truck holds a bag of food provided by the Taliban.
FROM TOP: Refugees who were deported by Pakistan ask Taliban soldiers for informatio­n at the Torkham crossing Nov. 11. A truck with 55 returning Afghans arrives Nov. 10 at the main Taliban-run refugee camp near the border crossing. One woman aboard the truck holds a bag of food provided by the Taliban.

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