
Inside Iran's crackdown on Afghan migrants after the war with Israel
More than 1.5 million Afghan refugees and migrants have been sent back in 2025, according to the United Nations' International Organization for Migration (IOM), while the Red Cross says more than one million people more could be sent back by the end of the year.
Iran has been hosting Afghans for decades. While it has periodically expelled irregular arrivals, it has now taken its efforts to unprecedented levels after the war with Israel that killed more than 1,000 people in Iran, many of them civilians.
Iran has also been building a wall along its massive eastern borders with Afghanistan and Pakistan to stem the flow of irregular migration, and smuggled drugs and fuel.
The parliament is also planning for a national migration organisation that would take over its efforts to crack down on irregular migration.
'I'm afraid'
'I feel like we're being singled out because we're easy targets and don't have many options,' said Ahmad*, a 27-year-old undocumented Afghan migrant who came to Iran four years ago.
Like others, he had to work construction and manual labour jobs before managing to get hired as the custodian of an old residential building in the western part of the capital, Tehran.
At the current rate of Iran's heavily devalued currency, he gets paid the equivalent of about $80 a month, which is wired to the bank card of an Iranian citizen because he cannot have an account in his name.
He has a small spot where he can sleep in the building and tries to send money to his family in Afghanistan whenever possible.
'I don't really leave the building that much because I'm afraid I'll be sent back. I don't know how much longer I can live like this,' he told Al Jazeera.
Vahid Golikani, who heads the foreign nationals' department of the governor's office in Tehran, told state media last week that undocumented migrants must not be employed to protect local labour.
Daily returns, which include expulsions and voluntary returns, climbed steeply after the start of the war, with average daily returns exceeding 29,600 in the week starting July 10, said Mai Sato, UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Iran.
She was among four special rapporteurs who decried the mass returns on Thursday, adding their voice to rights organisations such as Amnesty International.
'Afghanistan remains unsafe under Taliban rule. These mass returns violate international law and put vulnerable people, especially women, children, and minorities, at severe risk of persecution and violence,' Sato said.
Alleged security risks
Authorities and state media have said undocumented immigrants may pose a security risk, alleging that some of them were paid by Israel to carry out tasks inside Iran.
While state television has aired confessions from a handful of unidentified imprisoned Afghans, but their numbers do not seem to match the scale of the expulsions.
The televised confessions featured men with covered eyes and blurred-out faces saying they had sent photographs and information online to anonymous handlers linked with Mossad.
Hundreds of Iranians have also been arrested on suspicion of working for Israel, and several Iranians have been executed over the past weeks as the government works to increase legal punishments for spying.
Mohammad Mannan Raeesi, a member of parliament from the ultraconservative city of Qom, said during a state television interview last week, 'We don't have a single migrant from Afghanistan among the Israeli spies.'
He pointed out that some Afghans have fought and died for Iran, and that attempts to expel irregular arrivals should avoid xenophobia.
Economic pressures
Before the latest wave of forced returns, Iranian authorities reported the official number of Afghan refugees and migrants at a whopping 6.1 million, with many speculating the real number was much higher.
Only about 780,000 have been given official refugee status by the government.
Supporting millions of refugees and migrants, regular and irregular, takes a toll on a government that spends billions annually on hidden subsidies on essentials like fuel, electricity and bread for everyone in the country.
Since 2021, there have been complaints among some Iranians about the economic impact of hosting millions who poured into Iran unchecked in the aftermath of the Taliban's chaotic takeover of Afghanistan.
Amid increasing hostility towards the Afghan arrivals over the past years, local newspapers and social media have increasingly highlighted reports of crimes like theft and rape allegedly committed by Afghan migrants. However, no official statistics on such crimes have been released.
That has not stopped some Iranians, along with a large number of anonymous accounts online, from cheering on the mass returns, with popular hashtags in Farsi on X and other social media portraying the returns as a 'national demand'.
Again, there are no reliable statistics or surveys that show what portion of the Iranian population backs the move, or under what conditions.
Some tearful migrants told Afghan media after being returned from Iran that security forces beat or humiliated them while putting them on buses to the border.
Others said they were abruptly deported with only the clothes on their back, and were unable to get their last paycheques, savings, or downpayments made for their rented homes.
Some of those with legal documentation have not been spared, as reports emerged in recent weeks of Afghan refugees and migrants being deported after having their documents shredded by police.
Government spokeswoman Fatemeh Mohajerani and Interior Minister Eskandar Momeni have separately said the government is only seeking undocumented migrants.
'In cases where legal residents have been deported, those instances have been investigated,' Momeni said last week, adding that over 70 percent of those returned came forward voluntarily after the government set a deadline to leave for early July.
'I sense a lot of anger among the people'
For those Afghans who remain in Iran, a host of other restrictions make life difficult.
They are barred from entering dozens of Iranian cities. Their work permits may not be renewed every year, or the renewal fees could be hiked suddenly. They are unable to buy property, cars or even SIM cards for their mobile phones.
They are seldom given citizenship and face difficulties in getting their children into Iranian schools.
Zahra Aazim, a 22-year-old teacher and video editor of Afghan origin based in Tehran, said she did not truly feel the extent of the restrictions associated with living in Iran for Afghans until a few years ago.
Her family migrated to Iran about 45 years ago, shortly after Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution that brought the incumbent theocratic establishment to power.
'What really bugs me is the fact that I was born in Iran, and my family has been living here for over four decades, but I'm still unable to get something as basic as a driver's licence.
'That's not to mention fundamental documents like a national ID card or an Iran-issued birth certificate,' she told Al Jazeera.
By law, those documents are reserved for Iranian nationals. Afghan-origin people can apply if their mother is Iranian or if they are a woman married to an Iranian man.
Aazim said Iran's rules have only gotten stricter over the years. But things took a sharp turn after the war, and she has received hundreds of threatening or insulting messages online since.
'I've been hearing from other Afghan-origin friends in Iran … that this is no longer a place where we can live,' she said.
'A friend called me with the same message after the war. I thought she meant she's thinking about moving to another country or going back to Afghanistan. I never thought her last resort would be [taking her own life].'
Aazim also said her 23-year-old brother was taken by police from a Tehran cafe – and later released – on suspicion of espionage.
The incident, along with videos of violence against Afghans that are circulating on social media, has made her feel unsafe.
'I sense a lot of anger among the Iranian people, even in some of my Iranian friends. When you can't lash out against those in power above, you start to look for people at lower levels to blame,' she said.
'I'm not saying don't take any action if you have security concerns about Afghan migrants … I just wish they would treat us respectfully.
'Respect has nothing to do with nationality, ethnicity or geography.'
*Name has been changed for the individual's protection.
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