Taliban: Iran Expelled 28000 Afghan Migrants In Single Day

The Taliban’s High Commission for Addressing Migrants’ Affairs has announced that 28512 Afghan migrants were deported from Iran on Wednesday.

The Taliban’s High Commission for Addressing Migrants’ Affairs has announced that 28512 Afghan migrants were deported from Iran on Wednesday.
According to the commission’s figures, 19197 migrants entered Afghanistan via the Islam Qala border crossing, while another 8405 returned through the Pul-e-Abrisham crossing.
The commission also reported that 315 migrants returned from Pakistan through the Spin Boldak border crossing, 465 via Torkham, and 12 others through the Angur Ada border point.
An Iranian official stated on Tuesday that more than 717000 Afghan migrants have been deported from Iran since the start of the current solar Hijri year.
Nader Yarahmadi, head of the Bureau for Aliens and Foreign Immigrants’ Affairs at Iran’s Ministry of Interior, said the deportations were carried out through three border crossings into Afghanistan.
He stressed that migrants without legal documentation must leave Iran.
Yarahmadi gave the precise number of deportees as 717658 and added that the deportation process is ongoing.

The Taliban’s Supreme Court has announced that two men were publicly flogged in Kapisa and Faryab provinces after being convicted of “illicit relations” and “transporting alcoholic beverages.”
According to separate statements issued by the court, the men received between 20 and 39 lashes and were also sentenced to prison terms ranging from one to two years.
The floggings were reportedly carried out in the courtyards of the respective provincial courts, in the presence of local officials, court staff, and members of the public.
International human rights organisations have repeatedly condemned the Taliban’s use of corporal punishment, calling it a form of torture and a violation of international law. However, the Taliban continues to defend the practice, describing public floggings as part of the enforcement of “Islamic Sharia law.”
Since returning to power in August 2021, the Taliban has reinstated a number of punitive measures, including public executions, floggings, and amputations, despite international outcry.

The Taliban’s High Commission for Migrants’ Affairs has reported that more than 16000 Afghan migrants were deported from Iran in a single day on Tuesday, 8 July.
According to figures released by the commission, 13324 individuals returned to Afghanistan via the Islam Qala border crossing, while 3289 crossed through the Pul-e-Abrisham border crossing.
The commission also stated that on the same day, 2010 migrant families re-entered the country through Islam Qala and 496 families through Pul-e-Abrisham.
In addition, the Taliban reported that 237 Afghan migrants returned from Pakistan through the Spin Boldak border crossing and another 255 via the Torkham crossing.
Iran and Pakistan have significantly increased deportations of undocumented Afghan nationals in recent months, citing security and legal concerns. Human rights groups have raised alarms over the conditions faced by deportees, many of whom lack access to basic services upon return.

Pakistani media have reported that security forces killed eight militants from Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) as they attempted to cross into Bajaur district from Afghanistan’s Kunar province on Tuesday.
According to Dawn newspaper, citing security sources, the militants were intercepted and killed during an intelligence-based operation in the mountainous Lowi Mamund area of Bajaur. The Pakistani military has not yet issued an official statement regarding the incident.
Following the operation, security forces reportedly increased surveillance and patrols along the border to prevent further infiltration by militants based in Afghanistan.
Residents of the area said the clashes between security personnel and militants lasted for several hours. One child was reportedly injured during the fighting.
Separately, local sources reported heavy clashes between the army and TTP fighters in the Ghanam Shah Mamund area of Bajaur on the same day.
The TTP later confirmed the clashes in a statement, saying that Pakistani forces had attacked its hideouts, but claimed its fighters had managed to escape.
Cross-border attacks and militant infiltration from Afghanistan have been a growing concern for Islamabad, which has repeatedly urged the Taliban authorities in Kabul to prevent TTP militants from using Afghan territory as a staging ground.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) has welcomed the International Criminal Court’s decision to issue arrest warrants for two senior Taliban officials, calling the move a vital step toward accountability for human rights abuses in Afghanistan.
Liz Evenson, HRW’s director for international justice, said the warrants send an important signal that “repressive actions” will not go unpunished. “The international community should back the ICC in its critical work in Afghanistan and globally,” she added.
Evenson urged the prosecutor’s office to keep investigating alleged crimes by the Taliban, Islamic State Khorasan (ISIS-K), former Afghan security forces and United States military personnel to ensure justice for all victims.
HRW noted that meaningful justice is essential to breaking Afghanistan’s cycle of violence and impunity. Evenson said the ICC’s action should refocus global attention on the Taliban’s persecution of women, girls and people of diverse gender identities.
Since returning to power in 2021, the Taliban have been accused of imposing “gender apartheid” by barring women from education, work and public life, as well as carrying out arbitrary arrests and torture. In September 2023, HRW reported that Taliban authorities had committed crimes against humanity through gender-based persecution of Afghan women and girls.
The organisation says the Taliban have issued more than 100 decrees severely restricting women’s and girls’ rights, including freedom of movement, expression and assembly.

The Afghanistan Freedom Front (AFF) has hailed the International Criminal Court’s arrest warrants for Taliban leader Hibatullah Akhundzada and chief justice Abdul Hakim Haqqani, calling the move an important step toward justice for victims of Taliban abuses.
In a statement issued Wednesday, the armed opposition group said the warrants mark “a significant milestone” but insisted they are insufficient on their own. “All Taliban leaders and commanders involved in repression, killings, discrimination and other crimes against humanity must be brought to justice,” the AFF said.
The group urged the international community to impose tougher sanctions and other punitive measures on the Taliban, warning against what it described as “rewarding terrorism and extremism on the global stage”. It also criticised what it called a “contradictory” approach by foreign governments toward the Taliban, arguing that Afghanistan has become a safe haven for regional and transnational extremist organisations.
“The Taliban’s so-called fight against ISIS has become a lobbying tool rather than a genuine counter-terror effort,” the statement said.
Nearly four years after the Taliban’s return to power, the AFF contended, international attempts to hold the group accountable have yielded “no meaningful progress or results”. The group called for coordinated legal, political and economic pressure to ensure justice for Afghan victims and to prevent further rights violations.
