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Afghan deportees from Iran return to a home they barely know

Al Bhatti

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Just compare the numbers of those moving out of Iran with those moving out of Pakistan

UNHCR Urges Plan For Afghan Refugees Repatriation


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22 April 2015

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Afghan deportee, Tajigul Haidary, 26, presses her temples during an interview with The Associated Press, at the Afghanistan-Iranian border point.

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An Afghan deportee child rests on the ground in a reception tent, at the Afghanistan-Iranian border point on the outskirts of Islam Qala in Herat province, west of Kabul, Afghanistan.


Afghan deportees from Iran return to a home they barely know
Around 25,000 Afghans a month are deported from Iran at Islam Qala along with another 30,000 a month who cross returning home voluntarily.

Tajigul Haidary had overstayed her residents’ visa in Iran and was expecting just a hefty fine when she went to renew it, she said. Instead, she was arrested as an illegal immigrant, imprisoned, held in a transit centre with hundreds of other Afghans and, early this week, deported at a dusty border point back to Afghanistan.

It’s a homeland that she hardly knows. Her family took her to Iran when she was nine years old. Now 26 years old, she is married to another Afghan in Iran, has a 4-year-old son and an 8-year-old daughter and is five months pregnant. When she was deported, she was wrested away from them.

“My husband tried his best to get me out but they wouldn’t listen to him. My children cried, but it made no difference. I don’t know what to do. I have to get back,” she said, tugging at the voluminous black chador warn by many Iranian women, as she sat on a plastic chair in a shed at the Islam Qala border crossing.

Around 25,000 Afghans a month are deported from Iran at Islam Qala along with another 30,000 a month who cross returning home voluntarily. Iran has long been an outlet for Afghans, either searching for work to escape poverty or seeking refuge from their country’s wars and instability.

During a visit by Afghan President Ashraf Ghani to Tehran on Sunday, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani told him that the issue of Afghans in Iran “must be settled.” Rouhani said Afghans living in Iran would be registered “so that the government can make appropriate decisions about them.”

“Individuals who want to carry out business activities or study need to do so under legal requirements of obtaining visas,” Rouhani told journalists after the talks.

Millions fled from Afghanistan to its neighbours Iran and Pakistan during the 1979-1989. The UN refugee agency UNHCR has helped repatriate some 5.8 million Afghans who voluntarily agreed to return home.

Afghan deportees from Iran return to a home they barely know - Khaleej Times
 
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Time to go back home. No hard feelings.
 
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We only deport those who are staying illegally, hundreds of thousands of Afghans have studies in Iranian schools and universities. It's those illegal ones who usually make trouble.
 
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Pakistan is very slow in deporting them, it should do a lot more.
Iran has been and still is very generous to refugees... Iran has the biggest number of refugees coming to Iran...
Iran has nothing against legal Afghanistani people who either apply for working visa or temporary PR cards or even those who have been living long enough in Iran that they have got PR cards... there are over 1.5 million legal residents while these deportees are illegal residents..no country on earth bare illegal residency as they have no responsibilities, no tax, not being under security listings... It is a nice move...but my personal view is that we should accept those who has no place to go in Afghanistan due to being long enough in Iran or having no one in Afghanistan due to war.. I personally welcome such refugees and help them in Iran whenever I see them... Actually most Iranians giving jobs to them in order to help both themselves as they are good workers with morality and refugees to save up some money...
 
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