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Afghans and Bangladeshis tortured and publicly humiliated in Iran prompting protests in Kabul

Saif al-Arab

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Kabul Protests After Iran Cages Afghan Detainees
September 09, 2016 10:38 PM
32507D4B-3817-4884-9007-DC2CDE701A9E_cx0_cy7_cw0_w250_r1_s.jpg

This photo released by the Iranian Students' News Agency shows 'foreign nationals' who were displayed alongside contraband items - including weapons - by police in Shiraz, Iran.

The Afghan government is protesting Iran's decision to blindfold several Afghans and put them in cages in the center of Shiraz this week.

Nearly two dozen handcuffed Afghan refugees were displayed in a large metal cage. Police also exhibited confiscated items, including weapons, explosives, drugs, alcohol and smuggled soft drinks.

The deputy police chief of Shiraz, Nasser Keshawarz, said the refugees were among some 200 foreign nationals who entered Iran illegally and were arrested. Pictures of the public detention went viral on the internet, drawing outrage from Afghans and human rights activists, and an official diplomatic protest from Kabul.

D666F144-2604-438E-807D-6FB97C06323F_w250_r0_s.jpg

The Afghan government is protesting Iran's decision to blindfold several Afghans and put them in cages.

"Afghanistan's Ministry of Refugees and Returnees strongly condemns this inhumane and humiliating treatment and violation of human dignity of Afghan refugees by the Shiraz city police," the Afghan government said in a statement. "This behavior undoubtedly contradicts Human Rights, the 1951 [Refugee] Convention, and the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees, and stands against the bilateral refugee agreements between the two countries."

There was no response from Tehran or on official state-run media.

Criticism of Iran

Mohammad Reza Khoshak, an Afghan parliament member from western Herat province, which borders Iran, denounced the Iranian regime.

"In Shiraz, a city well-known for its poet Saadi, who asks for equality for all humans, my fellow citizens are put in cages and mistreated in a way similar to what militants of the Islamic State do to their prisoners," he told an Afghan newspaper.

Well-known Afghan poet Mustafa Hazara criticized Iran on his Facebook page. "How low a human could go?" he asked. "Look, my Iranian friends, if you travel outside your geographic location [country], you would realize that the value of humans is different than what you think of."

‘Systematic prejudice’

Roughly 3 million Afghans live in Iran. Most of them settled there after fleeing war and conflict in their homeland, and many lack basic rights and live without a formal status. About 950,000 Afghans in Iran are classified as refugees.

Iran has sent thousands of Afghan refugees, mainly ethnic Shi'ite Hazaras, to Syria to fight alongside forces of Hezbollah and Iran's elite Revolutionary Guard forces in support of the Syrian government. Dozens of Afghans have died in the Syrian war.

In his online post, Hazara asked educated Iranians to fight what he termed a systematic prejudice by Iran against Afghan refugees.

In general, Afghans living in Iran try to keep a low profile so as to not anger the regime.

"They [Iranian authorities] are very tough on us, and even one of my colleagues got a threatening message to not talk with foreign media about the incident," Afghan journalist Kazem Sharafuddin told VOA from Mashhad.

The caging of Afghans has angered some Iranians, as well. Former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami's spokesperson, Abdollah Ramezanzadeh, condemned the move.

"We are ashamed before Afghan people, ashamed before humanity," Ramezanzadeh said on his Instagram account.

https://www.voanews.com/a/kabul-protests-iran-cages-afghan-detainees/3500976.html

More photos:







Speaking about Bangladeshis:

Bangladeshis tormented in Iranian ‘torture cells’

Senior Correspondent, bdnews24.com

Published: 2014-12-12 23:35:10.0 BdST Updated: 2014-12-12 23:35:10.0 BdST


  • IMG_20141212_123015%5B1%5D.jpg

Several Bangladeshi workers, who went to the Middle East in search of jobs, have spoken of the terrible experience of being tortured in the deserts and islands of Iran.

The workers were trapped by human traffickers and had to pay ransoms for securing release from them.

The cheated workers shared their experiences with others at a discussion on Bangladesh migration law at Dhaka Reporters Unity auditorium on Friday.

They demanded enforcement of the Migration Act 2013 to save others from similar ordeals.

Md Elias of Barisal was one of the workers present at the discussion.

He said he went to the United Arab Emirates in 2011 spending Tk 450,000 on a job in which his daily wage was 50 dirham.

After 11 months on this job at Abu Dhabi, he was taken to Oman.

“From there I was taken on a 26-hour walk across the desert to an unknown place where there were remains of human bodies and stinks of decomposed bodies.

“Those who took me there told me that the bodies were of Bangladeshis,” Elias said.


Iran-Map.jpg



Untitled-1.jpg



He later came to know that the place was in the desert of Iran.

Elias said Bangladeshis working in Iran’s neighbouring countries were taken to that place. “A few people die on the way and a few at the place due to torture. Their bones and skulls were left in the desert.”

“Those who want to come back home from there are tormented. No one is released unless the captors are paid (equivalent to) Tk 500,000 in ransom,” he added.

Elias said his poor family sent Tk 365,000 to the captors for his release and he came back home a pauper after one and a half years of sufferings.

Ishaq Faruqi of Patuakhali, who went to the Middle East taking a job in 2012 spending Tk 420,000, endured similar torture.

He said he was taken to Iran from Oman through the Arabian Sea on a speedboat.

Faruqi said the body of another worker was thrown to the sea when he died on the boat.

“I was confined in Iran and asked to pay Tk 1 million in ransom to the captors. They continued torturing me and I bought freedom for around Tk 900,000.”

55_DRU_12122014_0001.jpg



Abu Sayeed Khan from Chandpur said: “I was taken to Dubai with the promise that I will be taken to Greece. Then I was shifted to an island of Iran where I was asked to pay Tk 400,000 in exchange for a job.”

He said he was being tormented there until he was rescued by police.

Khan returned home with the help of Iranian police.

Asma Akter Dalia of Narayanganj went to Dubai after being promised a job by traffickers.

“But the person who took me there sold me to another person at 5,000 dirham on arrival. I was not paid for the work I did at their house. The lady at the house used to torture me. At one stage they sent me back,” she said.

Dalia said she did not get any compensation from the agency in Bangladesh that sent her abroad.

Newsnextbd.com and Warbe Development Foundation organised the discussion titled ‘Ordeals of Migrants: Implementation of Migration Act 2013’.

Warbe Chairman Saiful Haq said an unscrupulous quarter was pushing the people into troubles by making false promises.

He said the people needed to be aware of the migration law to remain safe from such troubles.

http://bdnews24.com/bangladesh/2014/12/12/bangladeshis-tormented-in-iranian-torture-cells
 
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The treatment Afghans get in iran is shocking for a people that claim to be "rich and hospitable".

https://www.quora.com/Why-do-many-Iranians-hate-Afghans

https://www.quora.com/What-do-Iranians-think-of-Afghans


One Afghan guy raised an excellent point:

"Hate comes from ignorance. The question can be put as if Iranians hate most of their scholars, poets and history? The answer would be very different. While Iranians love maulana, Sanai. Ansari……. Which were born in the region currently called Afghanistan, Afghans should fall in the same category but ignorance fails some in this test."
 
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Were are the Bangladeshi, I'm sure Catholic church want to have a nice chat with them about their ability to walk on the water. Maybe they are some sort of saints.

Look at this map and tell me how on earth some guy who was taken to abuzabi and then to Oman can have a 26 hour walk and end up in Iran
Iran-Map.jpg


These small details are the difference between lie and truth.
He said he went to the United Arab Emirates in 2011 spending Tk 450,000 on a job in which his daily wage was 50 dirham.

After 11 months on this job at Abu Dhabi, he was taken to Oman.

“From there I was taken on a 26-hour walk across the desert to an unknown place where there were remains of human bodies and stinks of decomposed bodies.

“Those who took me there told me that the bodies were of Bangladeshis,” Elias said.

He later came to know that the place was in the desert of Iran.


Elias said Bangladeshis working in Iran’s neighbouring countries were taken to that place. “A few people die on the way and a few at the place due to torture. Their bones and skulls were left in the desert.”

When you look at the article you see these at all trafficked to pgcc countries and now they had to somehow put Iran name in it without mentioning those true Muslim countries .in south of Persian gulf.
 
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Afghanistan has got 33 millions population .. 3 million of them (10 % of Afghans people) live in Iran legally or illegally ... if Iran was a bad place or Iranian treated them bad they wouldn't stay here for such a long time. and it's good that after a year you have published such a news ... September 09, 2016 ... and now August 2017 ...
Moreover those people in the cage were not arrested 'cause there were Afghans, Iranians were amongst them too .. they were some thugs,criminals, drug dealers, whom were arrested ..
On the other hand most of these refugees are results of invasion of Afghanistan back in 2001 to destroy Taliban ... Taliban are the same Mujahedeen that were armed, trained and funded by American and Saudis to fight the Soviet Union in this country ... and the UAE and Saudi Arabia along side with another country in the region are the only countries that recognized Taliban's government ... they destroyed the country and made these people to leave their homes and now are sad why Afghans might be treated inappropriately in Iran...


He said he went to the United Arab Emirates in 2011 spending Tk 450,000 on a job in which his daily wage was 50 dirham.

After 11 months on this job at Abu Dhabi, he was taken to Oman.

“From there I was taken on a 26-hour walk across the desert to an unknown place where there were remains of human bodies and stinks of decomposed bodies.

“Those who took me there told me that the bodies were of Bangladeshis,” Elias said.
He later came to know that the place was in the desert of Iran.

At first in Abu Dhabi then was taken to Oman and from there 26-hour walk across the desert.
And all the sudden abra kadabra the place was in the desert of Iran :yahoo:

I think probably he was Jesus Christ that after 26-hour walk from Oman he got to the desert of Iran ...


jesus-walks-on-water-lds-clipart-45.jpg
 
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i had seen some members with bangladesh flag over this forum.....

they seem to be just not intrested ....

why ??
 
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Kabul Protests After Iran Cages Afghan Detainees
September 09, 2016 10:38 PM
32507D4B-3817-4884-9007-DC2CDE701A9E_cx0_cy7_cw0_w250_r1_s.jpg

This photo released by the Iranian Students' News Agency shows 'foreign nationals' who were displayed alongside contraband items - including weapons - by police in Shiraz, Iran.

The Afghan government is protesting Iran's decision to blindfold several Afghans and put them in cages in the center of Shiraz this week.

Nearly two dozen handcuffed Afghan refugees were displayed in a large metal cage. Police also exhibited confiscated items, including weapons, explosives, drugs, alcohol and smuggled soft drinks.

The deputy police chief of Shiraz, Nasser Keshawarz, said the refugees were among some 200 foreign nationals who entered Iran illegally and were arrested. Pictures of the public detention went viral on the internet, drawing outrage from Afghans and human rights activists, and an official diplomatic protest from Kabul.

D666F144-2604-438E-807D-6FB97C06323F_w250_r0_s.jpg

The Afghan government is protesting Iran's decision to blindfold several Afghans and put them in cages.

"Afghanistan's Ministry of Refugees and Returnees strongly condemns this inhumane and humiliating treatment and violation of human dignity of Afghan refugees by the Shiraz city police," the Afghan government said in a statement. "This behavior undoubtedly contradicts Human Rights, the 1951 [Refugee] Convention, and the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees, and stands against the bilateral refugee agreements between the two countries."

There was no response from Tehran or on official state-run media.

Criticism of Iran

Mohammad Reza Khoshak, an Afghan parliament member from western Herat province, which borders Iran, denounced the Iranian regime.

"In Shiraz, a city well-known for its poet Saadi, who asks for equality for all humans, my fellow citizens are put in cages and mistreated in a way similar to what militants of the Islamic State do to their prisoners," he told an Afghan newspaper.

Well-known Afghan poet Mustafa Hazara criticized Iran on his Facebook page. "How low a human could go?" he asked. "Look, my Iranian friends, if you travel outside your geographic location [country], you would realize that the value of humans is different than what you think of."

‘Systematic prejudice’

Roughly 3 million Afghans live in Iran. Most of them settled there after fleeing war and conflict in their homeland, and many lack basic rights and live without a formal status. About 950,000 Afghans in Iran are classified as refugees.

Iran has sent thousands of Afghan refugees, mainly ethnic Shi'ite Hazaras, to Syria to fight alongside forces of Hezbollah and Iran's elite Revolutionary Guard forces in support of the Syrian government. Dozens of Afghans have died in the Syrian war.

In his online post, Hazara asked educated Iranians to fight what he termed a systematic prejudice by Iran against Afghan refugees.

In general, Afghans living in Iran try to keep a low profile so as to not anger the regime.

"They [Iranian authorities] are very tough on us, and even one of my colleagues got a threatening message to not talk with foreign media about the incident," Afghan journalist Kazem Sharafuddin told VOA from Mashhad.

The caging of Afghans has angered some Iranians, as well. Former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami's spokesperson, Abdollah Ramezanzadeh, condemned the move.

"We are ashamed before Afghan people, ashamed before humanity," Ramezanzadeh said on his Instagram account.

https://www.voanews.com/a/kabul-protests-iran-cages-afghan-detainees/3500976.html

More photos:







Speaking about Bangladeshis:

Bangladeshis tormented in Iranian ‘torture cells’

Senior Correspondent, bdnews24.com

Published: 2014-12-12 23:35:10.0 BdST Updated: 2014-12-12 23:35:10.0 BdST


  • IMG_20141212_123015%5B1%5D.jpg
Several Bangladeshi workers, who went to the Middle East in search of jobs, have spoken of the terrible experience of being tortured in the deserts and islands of Iran.

The workers were trapped by human traffickers and had to pay ransoms for securing release from them.

The cheated workers shared their experiences with others at a discussion on Bangladesh migration law at Dhaka Reporters Unity auditorium on Friday.

They demanded enforcement of the Migration Act 2013 to save others from similar ordeals.

Md Elias of Barisal was one of the workers present at the discussion.

He said he went to the United Arab Emirates in 2011 spending Tk 450,000 on a job in which his daily wage was 50 dirham.

After 11 months on this job at Abu Dhabi, he was taken to Oman.

“From there I was taken on a 26-hour walk across the desert to an unknown place where there were remains of human bodies and stinks of decomposed bodies.

“Those who took me there told me that the bodies were of Bangladeshis,” Elias said.


Iran-Map.jpg



Untitled-1.jpg



He later came to know that the place was in the desert of Iran.

Elias said Bangladeshis working in Iran’s neighbouring countries were taken to that place. “A few people die on the way and a few at the place due to torture. Their bones and skulls were left in the desert.”

“Those who want to come back home from there are tormented. No one is released unless the captors are paid (equivalent to) Tk 500,000 in ransom,” he added.

Elias said his poor family sent Tk 365,000 to the captors for his release and he came back home a pauper after one and a half years of sufferings.

Ishaq Faruqi of Patuakhali, who went to the Middle East taking a job in 2012 spending Tk 420,000, endured similar torture.

He said he was taken to Iran from Oman through the Arabian Sea on a speedboat.

Faruqi said the body of another worker was thrown to the sea when he died on the boat.

“I was confined in Iran and asked to pay Tk 1 million in ransom to the captors. They continued torturing me and I bought freedom for around Tk 900,000.”

55_DRU_12122014_0001.jpg



Abu Sayeed Khan from Chandpur said: “I was taken to Dubai with the promise that I will be taken to Greece. Then I was shifted to an island of Iran where I was asked to pay Tk 400,000 in exchange for a job.”

He said he was being tormented there until he was rescued by police.

Khan returned home with the help of Iranian police.

Asma Akter Dalia of Narayanganj went to Dubai after being promised a job by traffickers.

“But the person who took me there sold me to another person at 5,000 dirham on arrival. I was not paid for the work I did at their house. The lady at the house used to torture me. At one stage they sent me back,” she said.

Dalia said she did not get any compensation from the agency in Bangladesh that sent her abroad.

Newsnextbd.com and Warbe Development Foundation organised the discussion titled ‘Ordeals of Migrants: Implementation of Migration Act 2013’.

Warbe Chairman Saiful Haq said an unscrupulous quarter was pushing the people into troubles by making false promises.

He said the people needed to be aware of the migration law to remain safe from such troubles.

http://bdnews24.com/bangladesh/2014/12/12/bangladeshis-tormented-in-iranian-torture-cells



BRAVO!.......BRAVO!!!.......Well done Iran! They're only protecting their security. Pakistan badly needs to copy this. Had we been doing this since the 1990s, there would be no terrorism. The Iranians know that if they show the Afghans any kindness, their country will have terrrorism problems like Pakistan. It's about time we Pakistanis toughen up with regards to the Afghan problem in our country.

Well Done Iran!
 
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BRAVO!.......BRAVO!!!.......Well done Iran! They're only protecting their security. Pakistan badly needs to copy this. Had we been doing this since the 1990s, there would be no terrorism. The Iranians know that if they show the Afghans any kindness, their country will have terrrorism problems like Pakistan. It's about time we Pakistanis toughen up with regards to the Afghan problem in our country.

Well Done Iran!

What is wrong with you? Do you want Pakistan to act like India? Once you start going down that slope, it is the end of the road for a nation.
 
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Cant blame Iran. Of course by no means all but nevertheless many of the refugees living on an almost permanent basis in Iran and Pakistan are engaged in crimes such as drug smuggling. The difference is that Iran clamps down hard on these criminals whereas Pakistan is super lenient and the results are clear for everyone to see

https://www.dawn.com/news/1279631
https://tribune.com.pk/story/399675/30b-worth-of-drugs-transit-through-pakistan-un-report/
https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/130881-Drug-addiction-kills-700-people-every-day-in-Pakistan

Thankfully the Pakistani government and military are finally too clamping down hard on these criminals but no human rights organization and no other country has the right to blame Iran or Pakistan for these tough acts, given that we have for decades provided refuge to millions upon millions of Afghan with little thanks from the rest of the world.
 
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What is wrong with you? Do you want Pakistan to act like India? Once you start going down that slope, it is the end of the road for a nation.




Then if we stick to the status quo, the Afghans will continue to commit terrorism in Pakistan with impunity as they currently do. We need a final solution to this problem. Our future depends on it. I am feed up with our nation being the punch bag.

Cant blame Iran. Of course by no means all but nevertheless many of the refugees living on an almost permanent basis in Iran and Pakistan are engaged in crimes such as drug smuggling. The difference is that Iran clamps down hard on these criminals whereas Pakistan is super lenient and the results are clear for everyone to see

https://www.dawn.com/news/1279631
https://tribune.com.pk/story/399675/30b-worth-of-drugs-transit-through-pakistan-un-report/
https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/130881-Drug-addiction-kills-700-people-every-day-in-Pakistan

Thankfully the Pakistani government and military are finally too clamping down hard on these criminals but no human rights organization and no other country has the right to blame Iran or Pakistan for these tough acts, given that we have for decades provided refuge to millions upon millions of Afghan with little thanks from the rest of the world.



Us Pakistanis give the Afghans FAR FAR too many resources, privileges, and amenities that they don't deserve. In return we get insults and abuse from them. It's time to say enough is enough. To hell with them. We need to take a leaf out of the Iranian book.
 
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Then if we stick to the status quo, the Afghans will continue to commit terrorism in Pakistan with impunity as they currently do. We need a final solution to this problem. Our future depends on it. I am feed up with our nation being the punch bag.





Us Pakistanis give the Afghans FAR FAR too many resources, privileges, and amenities that they don't deserve. In return we get insults and abuse from them. It's time to say enough is enough. To hell with them. We need to take a leaf out of the Iranian book.

Treat the cause of the problem rather than the symptoms of the problem. The Afghan are being used as a pawn by America and India. If we treat the Afghan harshly, it will turn the common people against us and will exacerbate the issue. We need to out manoeuvre the enemy behind these games to end these problems. To be honest, we are doing that and winning too.
 
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Treat the cause of the problem rather than the symptoms of the problem. The Afghan are being used as a pawn by America and India. If we treat the Afghan harshly, it will turn the common people against us and will exacerbate the issue. We need to out manoeuvre the enemy behind these games to end these problems. To be honest, we are doing that and winning too.



By treating them nicely all they do is commit terrorist attacks in Pakistan. The indians and their other allies are more than welcome to them. I just want them out of my country so they can stop harming it. To hell with Afghans.
 
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By treating them nicely all they do is commit terrorist attacks in Pakistan. The indians and their other allies are more than welcome to them. I just want them out of my country so they can stop harming it. To hell with Afghans.

That is exactly what the Indians want. As Pakistan drifts further from the Afghan people, they fall into the lap of the Indians. That is what we must avoid. Do you want the Indians to benefit from your actions?
 
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That is exactly what the Indians want. As Pakistan drifts further from the Afghan people, they fall into the lap of the Indians. That is what we must avoid. Do you want the Indians to benefit from your actions?



Afghans are snakes. They will always despise us no matter how much we do for them. History has shown this. They can all go to hell. They are far to drugged up, useless and inferior to do anything to Pakistan. Long may it continue.
 
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