One in Four Afghan Returnees Lacks Shelter: IOM

Around 2.4 million Afghan migrants returning from neighboring countries struggle with unemployment, inadequate shelter, and limited access to essential services, IOM says.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) reported that only 11 percent of returning Afghan migrants have jobs, leaving the majority without income.

The organization stated on Sunday on its social media platform X that one in four returnees does not have access to adequate shelter, highlighting severe housing shortages across the country.

More than half of the returnees do not possess official identification or essential documents, restricting their access to government services, banking, education, and employment.

Many returnees also face limited access to basic services, livelihoods, and support mechanisms, IOM added.

The UN reported in late December that Afghanistan’s unemployment rate stands at 75 percent, exacerbating the challenges faced by returning migrants.

Over 90 percent of Afghanistan’s population lives below the poverty line, with falling per capita income, declining GDP, and reduced humanitarian aid driving widespread poverty.

Without targeted support, experts warn that the combination of unemployment, poverty, and lack of documentation will continue to hinder the reintegration of millions of Afghan returnees.

One in Four Afghan Returnees Lacks Shelter: IOM
read more

After fleeing the Taliban, they felt safe in America. A shooting in D.C. changed everything.

Robert Samuels

The Washington Post

January 11, 2026

MANHATTAN, Kan. — Inside a small beige room in a modest beige house, three Afghan refugees gathered around a long table where a lifelong Kansan had prepared for them a lesson about the Constitution.

“When the U.S. fought for freedom, they needed to create new rules,” she told them on a Monday evening in early December. “It starts with the phrase ‘We the People.’ Remember that. We the people.”

Rohina Safa, 28, scribbled notes as she learned about the power of citizenship, clinging to a hope that she and the others might one day gain it. Nearly four years ago, she and the two other Afghans at the table fled their homeland to escape persecution from the Taliban. When they set foot in America, lawmakers and veterans groups across the nation eagerly embraced them. The urge to help was so strong that here, in a small city in the center of the country, local veterans started a refugee resettlement agency dedicated to helping them find a new life in Kansas.

But over the past year, the women have had to navigate a different America, one in which the zeal for their presence has begun to fade. Under a new administration and in the wake of a national tragedy, they had little choice but to study American history to deal with the uncertainty of the American present.

Weeks earlier, an Afghan refugee trained by the U.S. military allegedly shot two National Guard members — one fatally — who were patrolling near the White House. Within hours, on the eve of the Thanksgiving holiday that the women had recently learned about, President Donald Trump’s administration was using the shooting to justify, and amplify, his hard-line stance against refugees.

Since Trump’s inauguration, his administration had severely restricted the acceptance of refugees from countries other than South Africa and slowed the issuance of green cards. States suspended access to food stamps and Medicaid for those seeking asylum. And after the shooting, Trump vowed to review the background of every Afghan refugee, saying he hoped his policies would yield “reverse migration” from the United States. “We have enough problems. We don’t want those people,” the president said of Afghans and other refugees.

The harsh language sowed fears among Afghans nationwide that their pursuit of the American promise would soon be met with prejudice, rejection or even deportation.

“Every night, I am thinking about this,” Safa said. “If they send me back there, what am I going to do? They are sending me to my death.”

All three women at the table were Hazara, an ethnic group that has faced persecution for centuries in Afghanistan. They had benefited from the American occupation, which opened opportunities for women to further their education in a country that largely prohibited girls from receiving an education. Safa, 28, studied to become a neurologist. A woman in her 30s at the head of the table had been a trained psychologist.

“And what were you?” the teacher asked a third woman.

“I was in university,” said Fatima Farahmand, 24. “I was studying Russian.”

When the Taliban seized power in 2021, the women were educated and unmarried. That meant they had to run.

The refugees who settled in Kansas tried to choose their words carefully, if they were comfortable speaking publicly at all. Many of them were women whom U.S. forces trained to be part of the Afghan National Army and nervous that speaking out might lead to the Taliban harming their families back home. They also feared the wrath of Trump, a president known for seeking retribution.

Safa had been proud of her three years in Kansas. She had worked factory jobs assembling mailboxes and hoses. She completed training to become a certified nurse’s assistant and began studying to become a licensed practical nurse in an area short on medical workers. She got off public benefits, learned English and adopted American fashion.

After her night shifts, Safa brewed tea and opened a worn copy of Rumi’s poems, searching for a sense of tranquility. Rumi always helped her deal with life’s big questions. She also needed to answer the smaller ones, like the 128 possible questions she could be asked during a U.S. citizenship test, which is why she and the other women came to a class in the tiny house twice a week. There, they were learning the fundamentals of a country whose values were becoming more unpredictable.

“When I got here, I just wanted to live like these [American] people,” Safa said. “I want to go to university and have a good job. Most of all, I wanted freedom. I’m so scared I won’t get it.”

In Manhattan, Aaron Estabrook had been able to obtain his own American Dream. After serving with the U.S. Army for a year in Afghanistan, he moved here and graduated from Kansas State University, hoping to dedicate his life to public service.

He was serving on the school board in 2013 when a message popped up on his Facebook page. It was from Matiullah Shinwari, an Afghan who had repeatedly saved his life.

When Estabrook was abroad, a commander had given him orders to find a trustworthy Afghan to assist them. He searched a local tent city and noticed Shinwari. He seemed kind and had a background teaching English; his speedy speech contrasted with Estabrook’s methodical manner of speaking.

The two journeyed on more than 300 missions together, largely going ahead of troops in dangerous places to assess whether enemies would fire at them. “We were the grunts,” Estabrook recalled.

In Shinwari’s Facebook message, he told Estabrook that he had been living in a dangerous part of the country and needed protection. He asked for Estabrook’s help to come to the U.S. Estabrook vowed to get Shinwari out of harm’s way, just as the interpreter had once done for him.

After a friend warned Shinwari how expensive it might be to move to California with five children, he decided it would be best to follow Estabrook to a more affordable place. Shinwari waited for 3½ years as immigration officials vetted him. Meanwhile, Estabrook emailed the State Department and Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kansas) at least once a month to urge them to get Shinwari to the U.S. before he lost his life.

When Shinwari arrived in 2017, Estabrook was his de facto case manager, helping his children receive their vaccinations and get registered for school. Shinwari found jobs as a bus driver, then as an interpreter for the school district and health department.

Four years later, in August 2021, the Taliban recaptured Kabul. Now it was Shinwari on the receiving end of phone calls and messages from interpreters and intelligence officers who needed help.

Testifying before Congress, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the time, Gen. Mark A. Milley, described the U.S. evacuation as a “strategic failure.” The Taliban’s resurgence was swifter than U.S. forces had anticipated, endangering American civilians and Afghan allies alike. And Estabrook, now on the city commission, became one of the scores of veterans who took on a new mission to protect their Afghan associates, calling lawmakers, starting nonprofits, pleading for help in TV segments.

Estabrook said he was watching CNN when he saw another veteran named Fatima Jaghoori pleading for the government to assist unmarried Afghan women before they suffered from the Taliban’s cruel oppression. To his surprise, Jaghoori was also living in eastern Kansas.

The two decided to work together. While Estabrook leveraged his position as a city commissioner to secure housing and employment options for the Afghans, Jaghoori worked with other veterans to come up with an exit plan for a group of Hazara women, along with U.S.-trained female members of the Afghan National Army. In Afghanistan, she helped to arrange safe houses, where the women were instructed to stay inside to avoid being caught.

If someone heard a rumor that the Taliban were on to them, the women would rush to find hijabs and drape them over their heads. They’d turn off their cellphones, switch off the lights and pack themselves into a single, dark room for hours.

Then, at dusk, they’d steal from one safe house to the next, until they were allowed into a refugee camp in Abu Dhabi. There, the women waited for 10 months while the U.S. government vetted them.

Jaghoori and Estabrook discovered a logistical obstacle to getting the women to Manhattan: Refugees had to live within 100 miles of a resettlement agency. Together, Jaghoori and Estabrook founded the Manhattan Afghan Resettlement Team, or MART.

Nearly 200,000 Afghan refugees have come to the U.S. since 2021, with 211 of them resettling in Manhattan. When the refugees began arriving, piles of clothing and toys and teakettles crowded the mayor’s front porch and garage. Someone donated a 2002 Ford Windstar to drive families around. The university lent empty dorms to provide temporary housing.

The community of 55,000 became home to Afghan factory workers, Afghan custodians, Afghan bus drivers.

Shinwari could not contain his excitement to have more Afghans in his community. He wanted them to see the big city, so they traveled to Kansas City and Omaha, and he watched their delight upon seeing gorillas at the zoo. Their children taught their classmates how to play cricket. When a doctor complained that the refugees were so dehydrated that he could not draw blood from them, MART hosted a workshop on the importance of drinking water and distributed reusable bottles.

“It was beautiful,” Shinwari said.

The new resettlement agency used donations to buy the modest beige house, which was the childhood home of writer Damon Runyon, whose tales of New York gamblers and swindlers inspired the classic musical “Guys and Dolls.” Because the team also resettles families from other countries, the A in MART now stands for “Area,” not “Afghan.”

Jaghoori, a Hazara woman who immigrated to Kansas when she was 10, began to believe the U.S. was willing to move beyond the prejudice she had encountered as a child.

“My entire family has sacrificed for this country,” said Jaghoori, whose husband died while serving in Afghanistan. “I always wondered when would we be seen as Americans, not just Afghans who live in America.”

On the first day of the Trump administration, Jaghoori worried these new refugees would see an uglier, harder side to the United States. The administration paused refugee resettlement and wiped out funding for aid programs helping them. The Kansas legislature zeroed out funding for its state refugee office, MART’s primary budget source.

The state office had enough in reserve to keep the agency afloat for another fiscal year, but what will happen after that is unclear. No state money means fewer case managers — if any — to help the Afghans navigate an increasingly complicated path to a green card or citizenship.

On Nov. 1, the state enacted new requirements and refugee families began to lose public benefits. Jaghoori held on to a fleeting hope that these measures would be temporary, until the shooting and the political fallout dispelled that faith.

“These past 12 months have been nothing but fear and trying to stay hopeful,” Jaghoori said. “I am trying to find some sort of goodness within how these guys are living and how much they’re flourishing. But to know that it could possibly be taken away, they were shown a dream that could possibly never come true.”

Each day, Jaghoori said, she wakes up with the hope that her senators, her president or at least a veterans organization will remind the country about the need to help those who could otherwise be killed in a country that U.S. forces occupied for two decades. Each day, Jaghoori said, is disappointing.

“Where is the uproar?” Jaghoori said. “Why aren’t people in the streets?”

Jaghoori said the locals have largely been supportive of their Afghan neighbors. On Giving Tuesday, MART had a goal of receiving $2,000 to help offset the loss of even more public benefits. Strangers donated $2,902.97. Seven new people signed up to volunteer. But some refugees have experienced small differences. The smiles they used to receive have turned into small recoils. A 24-year-old who worked at a grocery store recounted to friends that a man told him, “Your people hate our country.”

“No, no,” he said. “We love your country. We fought with your country.”

Shinwari, who had been living in Manhattan for nearly a decade, was driving an Uber when a college-age passenger asked where he was from. When Shinwari answered, the passenger threatened to call Immigration and Customs Enforcement to deport him. After Shinwari dropped him off, he said, the passenger walked to a police car and started pointing. Shinwari, now a U.S. citizen, was not sure what to make of the interaction. He laughed off the disrespect.

The morning after the class on American citizenship, refugees trickled into the beige house. All of them were trying to make life in the U.S. work, but American bureaucracy was not intuitive.

A man who gave his name as Muhammad, who moved to Kansas in 2023 after working at a university in Kabul, walked inside holding a stack of documents warning him that he was no longer eligible for Medicaid. He went through the process of finding a new insurance plan with a case worker, then said he had another question. He had seen on an Afghan news station that the time limit for work permits was going to be reduced from five years to eighteen months.

“Do you know when the 18 months will start? Because I’ve been here about 18 months,” he said. “If I cannot work, I cannot live. I am making progress, but this would set me back.”

No one from the state or the federal government had sent any such guidance for the agency. After a brief internet search, the case worker confirmed that U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services had just made that change. Her jaw dropped. “Good job being on top of that,” she said, trying not to show her frustration. “It’s just, everything is changing real fast. We have to look into it.”

“Thank you,” Muhammad said. “I’m sorry to take up your time.”

His mind began to shift to the alleged shooter.

“When he did that, he hurt all Afghans,” Muhammad said. “I understand Trump; he’s trying to protect his country. But now I feel so much shame. My son is waiting for the green card because he is looking to join the Army. He’s so nervous we won’t get it. He just walks around looking sad. I don’t want him to be sad. I want him to be proud.”

“I know,” the caseworker said. “It’s devastating.”

The following day, Shawn VanDiver, a U.S. Navy veteran who started a nonprofit after helping a friend escape Afghanistan in 2021, stalked the halls of Congress looking for lawmakers who might help. That morning he’d put on a dark blue suit and filled a 24-ounce plastic cup with black coffee, planning to spend his morning racing up and down stairs to find lawmakers willing to defy Trump and publicly support Afghan refugees.

“We are hunting for Republicans,” VanDiver said.

“We are asking for a couple people to be brave,” said Jessica Bradley Rushing, his chief of staff, walking alongside him. “But courage is in short supply.”

He had called, texted and emailed Republican lawmakers who had supported resettlement policies when there was a Democratic president. Now, under a new regime, they didn’t respond to him. He traveled from California to confront them directly.

Some organizations and leaders whom The Washington Post contacted insisted that they had not forgotten Afghans. They claimed to have been working behind the scenes in private meetings, fearing public discussion would be counterproductive. A spokeswoman for Moran, the senator from Kansas, said he wished the Afghan community the best, even though he supported “additional vetting of every Afghan refugee who entered the U.S. after the withdrawal of 2021 and making certain those who have been properly vetted and are in the U.S. legally are authorized to work so they can be productive members of society.”

VanDiver, the president of #AfghanEvac, did not think such efforts were enough.

Walking past an elevator bank, he ran into Rep. Blake D. Moore, a Utah Republican who had sponsored legislation to investigate President Joe Biden’s chaotic evacuation of troops.

“Thank you so much for everything you’ve done for Afghans,” VanDiver said. “We really need you to speak out on this. If it can happen in the next week or two, that would be great.”

VanDiver handed him a small coin that read “Maintain Urgency. Remove Uncertainty.” Moore looked down.

“It’s a challenge,” he said, fiddling with the coin.

Moore’s mouth opened, but words did not come out. Then he uttered: “I mean, you get it.”

VanDiver tried to explain how the public needed to be able to place the alleged shooter, Rahmanullah Lakanwal, in the proper context. (Lakanwal, who federal authorities say carried out the shooting after driving to D.C. from Washington state, has pleaded not guilty.)

“This is one dude who went off the deep end,” VanDiver said. “We can’t have anyone who said they care about allies abandon them.”

“Right,” Moore responded. Without committing to speaking out, the congressman walked into the elevator.

Minutes later, VanDiver saw Rep. Morgan Luttrell, a former Navy SEAL, pacing to his office. VanDiver ran after the Texas Republican.

“It’s a real hard thing to do right now,” Luttrell said before trailing off.

“It’s not that hard,” VanDiver said.

He had more success with Rep. Michael McCaul, who had once chaired the House Foreign Affairs and Homeland Security committees. McCaul, also a Texas Republican, was not seeking reelection and had less reason to fear upsetting the administration.

McCaul told VanDiver that “this case was a major setback” and that he did not want to come off as insensitive to the family and friends of the Guard members who were shot.

VanDiver stressed that U.S. forces trained Lakanwal to kill and told McCaul he suspected the alleged shooter struggled with his mental health. He noted that the Trump administration cut funding for mental health programs for refugees, which would have made it harder for him to find help.

“So, what do you think? He snapped?” McCaul asked.

VanDiver nodded.

“Well, we’ve had a few veterans snap,” McCaul added. “Timothy McVeigh was a veteran. And Lee Harvey Oswald.”

“Exactly!” VanDiver said. “That’s my point. We don’t hold it against all veterans.”

The discussion was enough to persuade McCaul to record a video. They found an American flag at a wall nearby and stood in front of it.

“When it comes to our Afghan partners and allies, they served with our military, they served with our intelligence community,” McCaul said as Bradley Rushing recorded. “The credo in the military is no man left behind, and we promised them that we would protect them.”

“Thank you so much!” VanDiver told him after they finished recording. He walked away and pumped his fist. “Yes!”

He vowed to continue coming back to Capitol Hill until the administration began issuing visas again for Afghans who had helped the military. Since McCaul, only one other Republican — Rep. Joe Wilson of South Carolina — has recorded a video supporting them.

On another day in Manhattan, Salehmohammad Mamon, 42, and his son circled around a silver truck in the city’s bar and restaurant district, his thick black hair flopping in the wind. He was three months into his business venture, a food truck specializing in Afghan dishes. On this day, he parked the vehicle outside of a parking lot near a Popeyes, hoping to court curious customers. The deep lines on his forehead furrowed. The generator was on the fritz, which disappointed a redheaded young man in scrubs who was eager to taste a new cuisine.

“I think I can be successful with this,” said Mamon, his words loud and fast. “I don’t want to rely on government, so I’m trying my own business. I need the money. I have eight kids.”

Mamon had been working in dentistry in his war-torn country. He said everyone in his area had many children during the war because it was not uncommon for children to get caught in bomb blasts and die.

He began to serve as a medic for the U.S. military, applying tourniquets, trying to reattach blown-off body parts. Occasionally, Mamon said, he would see Lakanwal, the alleged shooter. He remembered him as a diligent, risk-taking young man.

“I remember him in Unit 3,” said Mamon, who moved to Manhattan in early 2022. “He was always being sent out with those guys, doing dangerous things.”

From the moment he heard about the shooting, Mamon suspected what might have led someone to that point. Those who worked with the U.S. forces cope with the same violence, the same pressure that can lead to mental health struggles common to veterans. Then, they come to the U.S. and face the hardship of being poor in a new country, a place that could seem like Mamon’s silver truck: a vessel of opportunity that does not always work as it should.

“This is depression,” Mamon said of the suspect’s alleged actions. “It’s a hard thing. To come here and to try. I’ve been happy here because people are kind. I have roots. But there is a lot of depression. Even me, now I’m kind of depressed thinking about what might happen to me if I go back.”

The country had big questions, but in Manhattan, Mamon found something more tangible, more tactile, more kind than the seething he saw on TikTok and on the news. The mayor knows him by name. Mamon didn’t think his English was good enough to pass the board exams to practice dentistry, but he found an Indian restaurant that hired him as a cook. The managers taught him what he needed to do to sell food.

Mamon told a friend he made playing pool that he was saving money to buy a food truck. He did not go to a bank because it was against his religion to take out an interest-bearing loan. The friend invited him over the next day, then offered him $20,000 to purchase the vehicle.

Mamon said he offered to pay $1,000 each month until the money was paid back. No, no, his American friend said. Only do so if the truck is successful.

“There are good people all over this country,” Mamon said. “I would like to have my green card. I would like to be a citizen. But if Trump tells me to go, I have to go. It is not my country.”

The country was not his country, but the city had become his home. Mamon thought about his children, his youngest just 3, born here in Kansas on the Fourth of July. He thought about his eldest, Yasir, who had just finished high school but was taking a year off to perfect his English and help with the truck. Yasir, 19, hoped to study mechanical engineering. And play cricket. And join the military.

“Army,” Mamon said.

“Navy,” Yasir replied.

“If they tell me I have to go home, I would go home,” Mamon said, “but I would want my kids to stay. This place is good for them.”

After fleeing the Taliban, they felt safe in America. A shooting in D.C. changed everything.
read more

‘I can’t walk anymore’: Afghans freeze to death on route to Iran

Agence France-Presse

5 Jan 2026

Ghunjan (Afghanistan) (AFP) – Habibullah set off from his home in western Afghanistan determined to find work in Iran, only for the 15-year-old to freeze to death while walking across the mountainous frontier.

“He was forced to go, to bring food for the family,” his mother, Mah Jan, told AFP at her mud home in Ghunjan village.

“We have no food to eat, we have no clothes to wear. The house in which I live has no electricity, no water. I have no proper window, nothing to burn for heating,” she added, clutching a photo of her son.

Habibullah was one of at least 18 migrants who died last month while trying to cross illegally into Iran from Afghanistan’s Herat province, according to officials, when temperatures were around -3C.

With earthquakes and drought compounding a daily struggle to survive in Afghanistan, around half the population will need humanitarian assistance this year, according to the United Nations.

“There was no other way left for me. I thought, let him go to make our life better,” said Mah Jan, 50, who requested the family’s surname not be published for privacy reasons.

Habibullah’s stepbrother, Gul Ahmad, said the teenager had tried shoe polishing but only earned up to 15 afghanis (23 cents) per day.

“He was ready to be a shepherd for 2,000 afghanis ($30 a month), to work in a shop, but he found nothing. So he was forced to leave. He told his mother, ‘Let’s trust in God, I’m going to Iran’,” said Gul Ahmad, 56.

– ‘Very dangerous’ –

Habibullah was among 15 bodies returned from Iran, an Afghan border source told AFP on condition of anonymity.

A further three migrants who died were recovered on the Afghan side of the frontier, an army official said.

Over just a matter of days last month, around 1,600 Afghan migrants “who were at risk of perishing due to the weather” were rescued in the mountains, according to Iranian border guard commander Majid Shoja, quoted by the ILNA news agency.

They are drawn to Iran due to greater job opportunities and a common language, but legal routes are limited.

Afghanistan’s deputy minister for labour and social affairs, Abdul Manan Omari, said Sunday it was “necessary to do more” to facilitate work permits for migrants.

Iran and Pakistan have combined sent back five million Afghans since September 2023, increasing the country’s population by 10 percent, according to the International Organization for Migration.

The agency’s deputy head in Afghanistan, Mutya Izora Maskun, said that many in the country report “the economy, job insecurity, food insecurity, constrained access to services” force them to leave.

They do so even if that means going through “illegal crossing points that are very dangerous due to the cold and the risks of human trafficking”, she told AFP.

The Taliban government has taken “serious steps to fight the smugglers”, interior ministry spokesman Abdul Mateen Qani told AFP.

But attempts to reach Iran have not stopped.

‘Destitute’

In the last week of December, “347 people who were trying to illegally cross the border into Iran were identified and arrested”, a military unit in western Afghanistan said in a statement on Saturday.

Abdul Majeed Haidari, whose one-year-old son suffers from a heart problem, tried his luck in mid-December.

Working at a brick oven, the 25-year-old could no longer afford to pay for his son’s medication and family expenses.

“We left because we were so destitute,” his stepbrother Yunus, who accompanied him, told AFP.

“We set out in the rain. In such weather, the radars and cameras of the border guards do not work properly. But the smuggler got lost,” he said.

They failed to light a fire for warmth and, as snow fell, Yunus recounted his stepbrother’s words: “I can’t walk anymore.”

“Some told us to leave him so as not to endanger the other 19 people in the group,” said Yunus, who requested his full name not be used.

After carrying him for two more hours, “his eyes stopped closing, his body grew heavier,” Yunus recalled, before an Iranian family drove past and took them to hospital.

“They gave him electric shocks, but they said he was already dead,” said Yunus, who has since returned to his village.

‘I can’t walk anymore’: Afghans freeze to death on route to Iran
read more

Pakistan–Afghanistan Trade Falls 53% as Border Closures Persist

Khaama Press

Trade between Pakistan and Afghanistan has dropped 53 percent amid prolonged border closures, with exporters suffering heavy losses, Pakistani officials and media reports say.

Trade between Pakistan and Afghanistan has dropped by 53 percent, largely due to prolonged border closures, Pakistan’s The Nation newspaper reported, citing official sources.

According to the data, bilateral trade fell to $594 million in the first half of the 2025–2026 fiscal year, down from $1.26 billion in the same period of 2024–2025.

An official source told the newspaper that the main reason for the sharp decline is the continued closure of key border crossings between the two neighbours.

Pakistan reportedly closed eight border points with Afghanistan following clashes between Pakistani forces and Taliban fighters on October 11, 2025. As a result, Pakistani exporters are losing an estimated $177 million per month due to restricted cross-border trade.

Pakistan and Afghanistan share several major trade routes that are vital for the movement of food, fuel and consumer goods, particularly for landlocked Afghanistan.

Border closures in the past have repeatedly disrupted supply chains, causing economic losses for traders on both sides and increasing prices in local markets.

Pakistan’s foreign ministry has said border crossings will remain closed until written and credible assurances are provided to prevent militant attacks and action is taken against the Pakistani Taliban, or TTP.

The prolonged shutdown has raised concerns among business groups and analysts, who warn that continued disruptions could further strain economic ties and deepen regional instability.

Pakistan–Afghanistan Trade Falls 53% as Border Closures Persist
read more

AfghanEvac Says U.S. Offering Cash to Afghan Refugees to Return to Afghanistan

Khaama Press

AfghanEvac says the U.S. government is offering cash to Afghan refugees to abandon resettlement, warning many face serious threats if they return home.

Shawn VanDiver, head of the Afghan refugee advocacy group AfghanEvac, said reports indicate the U.S. government is offering cash to Afghan refugees at the Silia camp to abandon resettlement and return to Afghanistan.

VanDiver warned that many of those refugees would face persecution, violence or death if forced back under Taliban rule.

More than half of the Afghan refugees affected are women and children, according to the statement, raising humanitarian and protection concerns.

The group said the refugees include Afghan prosecutors, lawyers and former U.S. partners who worked alongside American forces during the war.

VanDiver said these are “exactly the people the Taliban have sworn to punish,” stressing they trusted U.S. assurances of a legal pathway to safety.

Following the Taliban takeover in August 2021, thousands of Afghans fled the country fearing reprisals for their links to Western governments and institutions.

The United States has repeatedly pledged to protect Afghan allies through resettlement programs, though many applicants remain stranded or in temporary facilities.

VanDiver said offering money under such conditions does not make the return voluntary but instead amounts to coercion.

He added that paying approved refugees in U.S. custody to accept life-threatening returns violates international law and U.S. refugee commitments.

The AfghanEvac organization has called for immediate government transparency and urgent congressional oversight, questioning who authorized the policy and why the U.S. is withdrawing at the final stage.

AfghanEvac Says U.S. Offering Cash to Afghan Refugees to Return to Afghanistan
read more

MSF Warns Afghan Refugee Expulsions from Pakistan Spark Winter Humanitarian Crisis

Khaama Press

Doctors Without Borders warns that mass Afghan refugee expulsions from Pakistan are creating a severe winter humanitarian crisis, putting children, women, and families at risk.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has warned that the large-scale expulsion of Afghan refugees from Pakistan is creating a serious humanitarian crisis, particularly during the harsh winter months, endangering the lives of children, women, and families.

The organization said in a report released Wednesday, January 7, that many of the expelled refugees are being kept in temporary camps without proper shelter, and access to healthcare, clean water, and food remains extremely limited.

The report added that the forced deportations affect undocumented migrants, holders of Afghan citizenship cards, and temporary registration cards (POC), making conditions increasingly dangerous as winter intensifies across the region.

Xu Weibing, head of MSF’s mission in Pakistan, said Afghan families are caught between living in fear of deportation and returning to Afghanistan, urging the international community to provide immediate humanitarian and protective assistance.

Pakistan hosts one of the largest populations of Afghan refugees in the world, many of whom have lived in the country for decades. Previous repatriation efforts during winter have been criticized for lacking proper support systems, leaving vulnerable populations at risk.

According to UN agencies, Afghan refugees already face chronic challenges including limited access to healthcare, malnutrition, and overcrowded shelters, conditions that are significantly worsened during extreme winter weather.

MSF emphasized that without adequate shelter, medical care, and food, the winter season becomes a silent killer for Afghan refugees, threatening the survival of many vulnerable individuals.

Humanitarian experts have called for urgent international action, including temporary protection measures, emergency aid, and winterized shelter provisions, to prevent further loss of life among Afghan refugees in Pakistan.

MSF Warns Afghan Refugee Expulsions from Pakistan Spark Winter Humanitarian Crisis
read more

EU to Hold Special Meeting on Afghanistan’s Worsening Water Crisis

Khaama Press
 

 

The European Union will hold a special meeting this month to assess Afghanistan’s deepening water crisis and explore practical solutions to growing shortages.

The European Union delegation in Afghanistan announced that it will hold a special meeting on January 21 to examine the country’s worsening water crisis. The session is organized in collaboration with the XCEPT research program and aims to identify practical solutions to mitigate the impacts of water shortages.

The meeting will bring together researchers, local officials, and representatives of international organizations to gather accurate information, exchange experiences, and propose strategies for better water resource management. Officials said the goal is to find actionable measures to alleviate water scarcity across the country.

Afghanistan has faced a severe water crisis in recent years, with many regions suffering from dwindling freshwater sources. Environmental authorities and experts warn that without urgent action, shortages could have far-reaching consequences for agriculture, drinking water supply, and daily life.

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) recently reported that the rainy season in Afghanistan has begun warmer and drier than usual. Multi-model precipitation forecasts for November 2025 to January 2026 suggest that rainfall will remain below average, particularly in northern, northeastern, and central highlands. Snow accumulation is also significantly lower than normal, marking a critical hydrological deficit.

According to FAO, the Global Agricultural Monitoring initiative shows that the 2025/26 snow season started with the lowest “snow water equivalent” levels in 25 years, threatening spring irrigation, especially for wheat-growing areas reliant on river-fed systems.

Experts stress that with already low snowpack and continuing dry seasonal forecasts, concerns over adequate irrigation for spring 2026 are growing, potentially worsening food insecurity in affected regions.

Officials and humanitarian organizations are calling for immediate interventions, including improved water management, emergency aid, and infrastructure support, to protect vulnerable farmers and communities from further hardship.

EU to Hold Special Meeting on Afghanistan’s Worsening Water Crisis
read more

UK MP Says Turning Back on Women in Afghanistan Betrays Women Worldwide

By Fidel Rahmati

A UK MP warned that turning back on women in Afghanistan would betray women and undermine women’s rights globally.

Alice McDonald, a member of the UK Parliament, said in a statement that the government cannot turn its back on the crisis in Afghanistan. She emphasized that failing to act on gender apartheid and systemic oppression would betray not only Afghanistan women but women worldwide.

The MP described the situation for Afghanistan women and girls as “devastating,” but stressed that neither the UK nor the international community should surrender. Afghanistan women remain determined, resilient, and continue finding ways to run businesses and lead on the frontlines despite harsh restrictions.

McDonald added that combating systematic repression of Afghanistan women is essential for achieving global equality. She argued that gender equality is not only a moral imperative but also crucial for sustainable peace, security, and international progress.

Since the Taliban returned to power in August 2021, they have progressively stripped Afghanistan women of basic human rights, banning access to secondary schools and universities.

International condemnation has been widespread, with governments and civil society organizations calling on the Taliban to reverse these policies. Despite pressure, the group has continued enforcing restrictions and limiting women’s freedoms.

McDonald urged that the UK and other nations uphold global values and lead by example, offering hope to oppressed populations. She emphasized that concrete support for Afghanistan women must be a priority of international policy and humanitarian efforts.

UK MP Says Turning Back on Women in Afghanistan Betrays Women Worldwide
read more

Pakistan warns that Afghanistan is becoming ‘hub for terrorists’ and poses regional threat

By MUNIR AHMED

Associated Press
January 6, 2026

Pakistan’s military is warning that Afghanistan is becoming a “hub for terrorists.”

ISLAMABAD — ISLAMABAD (AP) — Pakistan ’s military on Tuesday warned that Afghanistan is becoming a “hub for terrorists and non-state actors,” widening its allegations to assert that its Taliban government is patronizing al-Qaida, the Islamic State group and the Pakistani Taliban.

Military spokesman Lt. Gen. Ahmad Sharif Chaudhry also told a news conference, without offering evidence, that about 2,500 foreign militants recently entered Afghanistan from Syria following the ouster there of former President Bashar Assad. Chaudhry asserted that the militants were invited to Afghanistan.

“These terrorists are neither Pakistanis nor Afghan citizens and belong to other nationalities,” Chaudhry said, adding that the reemergence of international militant groups could pose security risks beyond neighboring Afghanistan’s borders.

There was no immediate comment from Kabul to Chaudhry’s claim. Syria’s nearly 14-year civil war ended with Assad’s ouster in December 2024 but left behind a patchwork of armed groups on all sides of the conflict, shaped by years of foreign intervention.

Fighters from Syria have since taken part in other wars in the region and beyond, including Turkish-backed combatants sent to Libya and militants recruited by Russia to fight in Ukraine. Foreign fighters have joined Syrian rebel factions, pro-government forces and extremist groups such as the Islamic State group.

Chaudhry’s remarks came a day after Pakistan and China called for more “visible and verifiable” measures to eliminate militant organizations operating from Afghan territory and to prevent it from being used for attacks against other countries.

Relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan have deteriorated in recent months, with tensions occasionally spilling into violence. In October, the countries came close to a wider conflict after Pakistan carried out airstrikes on what it described as Pakistani Taliban hideouts inside Afghanistan. Kabul retaliated by targeting Pakistani military posts. The fighting ended after Qatar brokered a ceasefire.

Pakistan has long accused Afghanistan and India of backing the Pakistani Taliban, known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, and the outlawed Baloch National Army. Both Kabul and New Delhi deny the allegations.

Chaudhry also said Pakistan killed 2,597 militants in 2025, up from 1,053 a year earlier. The country recorded 5,397 militant attacks, up from 3,014 in 2024.

“Yes, this is a big number,” he said of the 2025 attacks. “Why? Because we are engaging them everywhere.” He added that Afghan nationals were involved in almost all major attacks inside Pakistan last year.

Pakistan warns that Afghanistan is becoming ‘hub for terrorists’ and poses regional threat
read more

3 Killed, 6 Injured in Takhar Protests Over Unregulated Gold Mining

Khaama Press

Three people were killed and six injured during protests in Chah Ab, Takhar, as residents demonstrated against unregulated gold mining and environmental destruction.

Residents of Chah Ab district in Takhar province clashed with local forces during protests over unregulated gold mining and water resource damage, sources said. At least three protesters were killed and six others injured.

The demonstrations, which began several days ago, escalated on Monday, January 5, when locals took to the streets with sticks and tools to voice their grievances against mining companies.

Video footage on social media shows protesters confronting Taliban forces, including an incident where a Taliban member firing at demonstrators was beaten by the crowd.

During the clashes, sources reported that protesters also set fire to the property of the mining company. Unverified reports suggest that one Taliban member was killed in the confrontation.

The Taliban have increasingly focused on exploiting Afghanistan’s mineral resources, particularly gold in Takhar and Badakhshan provinces, sparking widespread local opposition over environmental and economic concerns.

Similar protests occurred in Badakhshan earlier when residents opposed opium poppy destruction. UN reports indicate at least ten protesters were killed during that crackdown.

Analysts say the growing tension reflects deeper grievances in resource-rich provinces, where locals demand sustainable management and accountability from both the Taliban and private operators.

Observers warn that continued violent crackdowns on peaceful demonstrations could escalate unrest, further undermining public trust in the Taliban’s governance and their claims of legitimacy.

3 Killed, 6 Injured in Takhar Protests Over Unregulated Gold Mining
read more