OneWorld South Asia Home Today's Headlines Iran decides not to expel Afghan refugees
OneWorld South Asia OneWorld Network OneWorld South Asia
NEWS GET INVOLVED PARTNERS ABOUT OWSA OUR NETWORK
22 November 2009
Welcome to OneWorld South Asia. Bringing together a network of people and groups working for human rights and sustainable development from across the globe.
MDG themes
Poverty & Hunger
Education
Gender
Health
Environment
Global Partnerships
MDG plus
Climate Change
Human Rights
Social Justice
Governance
Millennium Campaign
How we work
New and Emerging Media
Knowledge Services, Innovations and Delivery
Community and Social Media
Technology Operation and Content Services
With whom we work
About Partnership
OWSA Partners
Join us!
Other OWSA channels
Digital Opportunity Channel
Audio content bank
Grassroots voices
Supported by

Iran decides not to expel Afghan refugees

Bookmark 
and Share
30 December 2008
 

It has come as a huge relief for the Hamid Karzai government in Afghanistan that neighbouring Iran has decided to suspend large-scale expulsions of illegal refugees until March next year. There are approximately 2.5 million Afghans, majority of them illegally, living in Iran.

Kabul: Iran is to suspend large-scale deportations of illegal Afghan migrants until March 2009, the Afghan Ministry of Refugees and Returnees (MoRR) has said.

The agreement was reached during a visit to Tehran by an Afghan delegation led by the second vice-president on 26 December.

Afghan- Refugees.jpg
Iran has deported over 362,000 Afghans so far in 2008/ Photo credit: IRIN

“We have been assured there will be no expulsions of Afghans from Iran this winter,” Abdul Karim Barahawi, the minister of refugees, told reporters in Kabul on 28 December 2008.

Tehran’s verbal assurances are expected to be converted into a formal written agreement in the near future, Barahawi said.

Aid workers have been warning that continued deportations could prompt a humanitarian crisis this winter by adding to the country’s current burdens: Some eight million of the most vulnerable Afghans are facing a difficult winter due to severe drought, high food prices and the ongoing conflict.

Iran has deported over 362,000 Afghans so far in 2008. About 360,000 were also expelled in 2007, according to MoRR.

The MoRR said 920,000 registered Afghan refugees and around 1.5 million Afghan migrants were currently living in Iran.

Unemployment, poverty, drought, insecurity and the lack of jobs were the major “push” factors driving young men to neighbouring Iran and other countries, experts said.

However, in the past three years, mass deportations from Iran have been a major political challenge for the Afghan government: Two cabinet ministers were sacked over deportation-related rows in May 2007.

Work permits for 300,000

In an effort to find a long-term solution, the government said it had been working with the Iranian authorities to issue work permits for 300,000 Afghan workers in Iran.

“We will give passports and the government of Iran will issue visas and work permits so that their residence and work will be regulated,” Barahawi said.

No one at the Iranian embassy in Kabul was immediately available to confirm Tehran’s willingness to suspend the deportations and issue work permits.

Thus far both Afghanistan and Iran have failed to regularise cross-border movements and implement appropriate immigration polices, the UNHCR/ ILO survey said.

Smuggling networks, which control over 90% of border crossings, generate fees of some US$ 94 million from migrants every year, and deprive the two countries of an estimated $ 221 million, the survey found.

The regularisation of trans-border movements, and Iranian immigration reforms, should yield economic and security benefits for Afghanistan and Iran, experts say.

 
Source : IRIN
Personal tools
Log in
About OneWorld
 
 
 
 
» E-BULLETIN
Asia and the Pacific MDG Watch
Subscribe to newsletter
 
OneWorld thematic channels and collaborative projects include:
EK duniya anEK awaaz digital opportunity channel open knowledge network iTrain online tiki the Penguin, Kids Channel