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’We have nothing’: Afghans driven out of Iran return to uncertain future

’We have nothing’: Afghans driven out of Iran return to uncertain future
Afghan refugees rest with their luggage at the zero point of the Islam Qala border crossing between Afghanistan and Iran. (AFP)
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Updated 30 June 2025

’We have nothing’: Afghans driven out of Iran return to uncertain future

’We have nothing’: Afghans driven out of Iran return to uncertain future
  • Since January, more than 690,000 Afghans have left Iran
  • Tehran ordered Afghans without the right to remain to leave by July 6

ISLAM QALA: Hajjar Shademani’s family waited for hours in the heat and dust after crossing the border into Afghanistan, their neat pile of suitcases all that remained of a lifetime in Iran after being deported to their homeland.
The 19-year-old and her three siblings are among tens of thousands of Afghans who have crossed the Islam Qala border point in recent days, the majority forced to leave, according to the United Nations and Taliban authorities.
Despite being born in Iran after her parents fled war 40 years ago, Shademani said the country “never accepted us.” When police came to her family’s home in Shiraz city and ordered them to leave, they had no choice.
But Afghanistan is also alien to her.
“We don’t have anything here,” she told AFP in English.
Between Iranian universities that would not accept her and the Taliban government, which has banned education for women, Shademani’s studies are indefinitely on hold.
“I really love studying... I wanted to continue but in Afghanistan, I think I cannot.”
At Herat province’s Islam Qala crossing, the checkpoint is usually busy handling the cycle of smuggling to deportation as young men seek work in Iran.
But since Tehran ordered Afghans without the right to remain to leave by July 6, the number of returnees — especially families — has surged. More than 230,000 departed in June alone, the United Nations International Organization for Migration (IOM) said.
Since January, more than 690,000 Afghans have left Iran, “70 percent of whom were forcibly sent back,” IOM spokesperson Avand Azeez Agha told AFP.
Of the more than a dozen returnees AFP spoke to on Saturday, none said they had fled the recent Iran-Israel conflict, though it may have ramped up pressure. Arrests, however, had helped spur their departures.

Yadullah Alizada had only the clothes on his back and a cracked phone to call his family when he stepped off one of the many buses unloading people at the IOM-run reception center.
The 37-year-old said he was arrested while working as a day laborer and held at a detention camp before being deported to Afghanistan.
Forced to leave without his family or belongings, he slept on a bit of cardboard at the border, determined to stay until his family could join him.
“My three kids are back there, they’re all sick right now, and they don’t know how to get here.”
He hopes to find work in his home province of Daikundi, but in a country wracked by entrenched poverty and unemployment, he faces an uphill climb.
The UN mission for Afghanistan, UNAMA, has warned that the influx of deportees — many arriving with “no assets, limited access to services, and no job prospects” — risks further destabilising the crisis-wracked country.
Long lines snaked into tents encircling the reception center where returnees accessed UN, NGO and government services.
Gusty wind whipped women’s Iranian-style hijabs and young men’s trendy outfits, clothing that stood out against the shalwar kameez that has become ubiquitous in Afghanistan since the Taliban swept to power in 2021, imposing their strict interpretation of Islamic law.
Deputy Prime Minister Abdul Salam Hanafi inspected the site on Saturday, striding through the crowd surrounded by a heavily armed entourage and pledging to ensure “that no Afghan citizen is denied their rights in Iran” and that seized or abandoned assets would be returned.
Taliban authorities have consistently called for “dignified” treatment of the migrants and refugees hosted in Iran and Pakistan, the latter having also ousted hundreds of thousands of Afghans since the latest decades-long war ended.

Over one million Afghans have already returned to Afghanistan this year from both neighboring countries. The numbers are only expected to rise, even as foreign aid is slashed and the Taliban government struggles for cash and international recognition.
The IOM says it can only serve a fraction of the returnees, with four million Afghans potentially impacted by Iran’s deadline.
Some of the most vulnerable pass through the agency’s transit center in Herat city, where they can get a hot meal, a night’s rest and assistance on their way.
But at the clean and shaded compound, Bahara Rashidi was still worried about what would become of her and her eight sisters back in Afghanistan. They had smuggled themselves into Iran to make a living after their father died.
“There is no man in our family who can work here, and we don’t have a home or money,” the 19-year-old told AFP.
“We have nothing.”


France investigates suspected ‘shadow fleet’ oil tanker anchored off coast

France investigates suspected ‘shadow fleet’ oil tanker anchored off coast
Updated 55 min 7 sec ago

France investigates suspected ‘shadow fleet’ oil tanker anchored off coast

France investigates suspected ‘shadow fleet’ oil tanker anchored off coast
  • The vessel is listed under British and European Union sanctions against Russia
  • The crude oil tanker left the Russian port of Primorsk on September 20

PARIS: The French Navy said on Tuesday that authorities were investigating a possible infraction by the oil tanker Boracay, a vessel suspected of belonging to the so-called “shadow fleet” involved in the Russian oil trade.
The vessel is listed under British and European Union sanctions against Russia. It was detained by Estonian authorities earlier this year for sailing without a valid country flag. Shadow fleet tankers typically have opaque ownership and insurance and are often more than 20 years old.
The crude oil tanker left the Russian port of Primorsk on September 20, according to MarineTraffic data. It sailed through the Baltic Sea and over the top of Denmark before entering the North Sea and transiting west through the Channel.
Ship tracking data shows that the 2007-built tanker was being shadowed by a French warship after it rounded France’s northwestern tip, before altering course and heading east toward the French coast. It is currently at anchor near Saint Nazaire.

CREW FAIL TO PROVE VESSEL’S NATIONALITY
The French Navy said an investigation was underway. The Brest prosecutor told Reuters a probe had been opened after the crew failed to provide proof of the vessel’s nationality and failed to comply with orders.
Britain and the EU imposed separate sanctions on the crude oil tanker in October 2024 and February 2025.
The EU said the vessel was linked to the transport of Russian crude oil and petroleum products “while practicing irregular and high-risk shipping practices.”
Britain said the vessel was “involved in activity whose object or effect is to destabilize Ukraine … or to obtain a benefit from or support the government of Russia” in the transport of oil or oil products that originated in Russia to a third country.
The vessel, which changed its name to Boracay — or on some shipping databases Pushpa — in December 2024, was previously named Kiwala. Ships keep the same IMO identification number throughout their lives, but they may change names.


Congo military court sentences former President Kabila to death for treason

Congo military court sentences former President Kabila to death for treason
Updated 30 September 2025

Congo military court sentences former President Kabila to death for treason

Congo military court sentences former President Kabila to death for treason
  • The government said Kabilia had collaborated with Rwanda and the M23 rebel group
  • Kabila had lived outside of Congo in self-imposed exile but returned in April to Goma

KINSHASA: A military court in Congo on Tuesday convicted former President Joseph Kabila of treason and other charges and sentenced him to death.
Kabila, who has been on trial in absentia since July and whose whereabouts are unknown, was accused of treason, involvement in an insurrection movement, conspiracy, and supporting terrorism. The prosecutor asked for the death penalty.
The government said Kabilia had collaborated with Rwanda and the M23 rebel group that seized key cities in eastern Congo in January in a lightning assault and has since occupied the cities. Kabila has denied the allegations.
In May, the country’s Senate voted to repeal his immunity from prosecution, a move Kabila denounced at the time as dictatorial.
Kabila had lived outside of Congo in self-imposed exile but returned in April to Goma, one of the cities held by the rebel group. It is not known if he stayed there, and his current location is unknown.


China court sentences 11 members of Myanmar-based crime syndicate to death

China court sentences 11 members of Myanmar-based crime syndicate to death
Updated 30 September 2025

China court sentences 11 members of Myanmar-based crime syndicate to death

China court sentences 11 members of Myanmar-based crime syndicate to death
  • The sentences came shortly after China on Sunday separately sentenced former Minister of Agriculture and Rural Affairs Tang Renjian to death
  • China issued arrest warrants for members of the Ming family in November 2023 on suspicion of fraud, murder and illegal detention

BANGKOK: A court in China sentenced 11 people to death on Monday for their roles in a family-run crime syndicate accused of running illegal gambling and scam operations worth more than $1.4 billion and for the deaths of disobedient workers.
The Wenzhou Intermediate People’s Court sentenced Ming Guoping, Ming Zhenzhen, Zhou Weichang — all members of a powerful family in Kokkang, Myanmar — to death along with eight others, according to a court statement.
The court also handed death sentences suspended for two years to five others, while a further 12 defendants received jail sentences of between five and 24 years. Two-year suspended death sentences are often converted to life in prison.
The sentences came shortly after China on Sunday separately sentenced former Minister of Agriculture and Rural Affairs Tang Renjian to death with reprieve for taking bribes. Tang took bribes of more than 268 million yuan ($38 million) in cash and property between 2007 and 2024, according to a statement by the Intermediate People’s Court of Changchun in the northeastern Jilin province.
China issued arrest warrants for members of the Ming family in November 2023 on suspicion of fraud, murder and illegal detention as part of a crackdown on illegal scam operations near the border with Myanmar.
The syndicate’s crimes resulted in the deaths of 10 workers and injuries to two others who tried to escape the scam centers it ran, the court statement said.
The centers, in which criminals run sophisticated online scams targeting people all over the world, have proliferated in countries in Southeast Asia, including Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia. They often use trafficked workers who are forced to conduct romance-based investment scams as part of a globalized industry that the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime estimates is worth $40 billion annually.
China is cracking down on scam centers in the region through joint operations or coordinating with local police forces. In February, China, Myanmar and Thailand exerted pressure on scam centers located along the Thai-Myanmar border, resulting in the release of more than 7,000 workers, most of whom were Chinese citizens.


UN conference: Rohingya Muslims face worsening atrocities, displacement, ‘sham’ election

UN conference: Rohingya Muslims face worsening atrocities, displacement, ‘sham’ election
Updated 30 September 2025

UN conference: Rohingya Muslims face worsening atrocities, displacement, ‘sham’ election

UN conference: Rohingya Muslims face worsening atrocities, displacement, ‘sham’ election
  • Secretary-general: Solution ‘lies in ending persecution and discrimination, ensuring accountability, and restoring and upholding rights’
  • High commissioner for human rights: ‘Today, life in Myanmar may be the worst it has ever been for the Rohingya and other minorities’

NEW YORK: At a high-level conference held at the UN General Assembly in New York, world leaders and top UN officials warned on Tuesday that the plight of Rohingya Muslims and other minorities in Myanmar has reached a critical tipping point.
With Myanmar’s military pushing forward with elections scheduled for December 2025 amid widespread violence, disenfranchisement and systemic persecution, the UN declared the process illegitimate and destabilizing.
Julie Bishop, the UN secretary-general’s special envoy on Myanmar, cautioned that the elections under current conditions “will increase resistance, protest and violence, and further undermine the fragile state of the country.”
She said more than four and a half years after the 2021 military coup, there is still “no agreed ceasefire, no agreed pathway to peace, no agreed political solution.”
Bishop, who recently completed her third mission to Myanmar, reported ongoing polarization, deepening military control and growing international complacency.
“The initial international condemnation of the military takeover has subsided,” she warned, citing the country’s senior general’s recent participation in high-level regional meetings and “instances of the lifting of sanctions.”
The High-Level Conference on the Situation of Rohingya Muslims and Other Minorities in Myanmar was convened under a UNGA resolution to mobilize global action and propose a time-bound, coordinated plan for resolving the Rohingya crisis.
It brought together member states, UN agencies, civil society and regional actors, and was marked by urgent calls to reject normalization of military rule and to ensure justice, dignity, and a future of full citizenship for the Rohingya people and all of Myanmar’s communities.
Bishop stressed that a sustainable solution to the Rohingya crisis is inseparable from resolving the country’s broader political and humanitarian emergency.
She lamented that the return of displaced Rohingya remains a distant prospect. “The worsening conflict poses a seemingly insurmountable barrier to their return,” she told the conference.
In discussions with Rohingya refugees in Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh, she heard direct appeals for peace, rights and self-reliance.
“They called for an end to violence by all sides and the beginning of a journey toward peace,” she said, adding that many Rohingya offered constructive proposals for dialogue and reconciliation provided that “accountability for all actors” is upheld.
Bishop also warned about collapsing humanitarian assistance. The 2025 Joint Response Plan for the country is only 37 percent funded, she said, warning that food aid to Rohingya refugees could halt entirely within two months.
UNICEF has already suspended major parts of its education programs due to financial shortfalls.
“Time isn’t on our side,” Bishop warned. “We’re yet to find the common ground or willingness to compromise that will bring the myriad parties to the negotiating table.”
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, in remarks delivered on his behalf by Chef de Cabinet Courtenay Rattray, called the Rohingya crisis a “deepening tragedy” that undermines regional stability and violates the basic dignity of millions.
“Myanmar is (Rohingya refugees’) homeland,” Guterres said. “But conditions in Myanmar’s Rakhine State impede the possibility of their safe, voluntary, dignified and sustainable return.”
He called for the protection of civilians, ensuring full and unhindered humanitarian access, and revitalizing global support for the crisis response.
Guterres said deteriorating conditions in refugee camps are putting women and girls at heightened risk of violence, trafficking and child marriage.
“The solution to this crisis lies ultimately in Myanmar,” he said. “It lies in ending persecution and discrimination, ensuring accountability, and restoring and upholding rights.”
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk echoed these warnings. “Today, life in Myanmar — especially in Rakhine State — may be the worst it has ever been for the Rohingya and other minorities,” he said. “It marks another grim chapter in a long history of persecution.”
Turk accused both the Myanmar military and the Arakan Army — one of the most powerful insurgent ethnic armed groups based in Rakhine State — of atrocity crimes and gross human rights violations against civilians.

The military, he said, is using airstrikes and artillery to kill civilians, destroy homes, and forcibly conscript men and boys.

“Some of the images and videos from the second half of 2024 are reminiscent of the atrocities of 2017,” he added.
Meanwhile, the Arakan Army has engaged in widespread abductions, forced recruitment — including of children as young as 14 — torture and extortion. “Many of those arrested have been missing for months,” Turk said.
Rohingya face growing surveillance, restricted movement, Internet shutdowns and mass displacement, he added.
Over 3.5 million people are displaced across Myanmar, and 15.2 million are facing acute food insecurity. Since January 2024, another 150,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh.
In light of all this, Turk condemned the planned elections. “Frankly, how can such elections be supported?” he asked.
“They neither reflect the legitimate aspirations of the Myanmar people, nor create a foundation for lasting peace.”
He said the Rohingya will be barred from voting due to their arbitrary exclusion from citizenship, while ethnic Rakhine parties have been disqualified altogether.
Turk called for the violence to end, and on states to halt the flow of arms, jet fuel and dual-use goods into Myanmar.
He also emphasized the need for full accountability for crimes committed by the military, the Arakan Army and all other parties.
He also reiterated his call to the UN Security Council to refer the Myanmar situation to the International Criminal Court.
UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi said: “We can’t keep going down the path of inertia and somehow expect a resolution while an entire population continues to waste away.”
He had recently returned from Myanmar and described a devastated country, already reeling from a major earthquake, now facing multiple overlapping crises.
Grandi said that “5.1 million are displaced, of whom 1.6 million have taken refuge in neighboring countries.”
The Rohingya, he added, suffer not only from systemic persecution but are also trapped in a war between two actors, the military and the Arakan Army, that do not represent them.
They face arbitrary arrest, forced labor, recruitment, and a near-total denial of identity and rights. “Their lives are defined by fear,” he said.
Grandi praised the generosity of regional countries, especially Bangladesh, for continuing to host nearly 1.2 million Rohingya despite growing pressures.
“Compassion is still possible,” he said, but warned that the humanitarian response is critically underfunded, including for food and cooking fuel.
Without new funding, “we’ll be forced to make more cuts while striving to minimize the risk of losing lives — children dying of malnutrition or people dying at sea.”
He called for increased support through funding and durable solutions, including refugee resettlement, education and labor mobility.
He also welcomed contributions from the World Bank and Asian Development Bank, which have invested over $1.25 billion into refugee and host community resilience programs.
However, Grandi emphasized, “the most important is not to forget that this crisis originates in Myanmar, and that… is where the solution lies.”
He urged countries with influence to intensify engagement not only with the de facto authorities, but also with the Arakan Army and other conflict actors.


Strong earthquake in central Philippines sends people running out of homes

Strong earthquake in central Philippines sends people running out of homes
Updated 30 September 2025

Strong earthquake in central Philippines sends people running out of homes

Strong earthquake in central Philippines sends people running out of homes
  • The earthquake was centered about 17 kilometers northeast of Bogo city in Cebu
  • Power went out in the Cebu province town of Daanbantayan

MANILA: A strong earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.7 shook the central Philippines Tuesday night, sending people dashing out into streets, damaging a stone church and knocking out power in some areas.
The earthquake was centered about 17 kilometers (10 miles) northeast of Bogo city in Cebu province, and was caused by movement in a local fault. The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology said it expected damage and aftershocks.
Power went out in the Cebu province town of Daanbantayan, where the stone church is located. The extent of the damage to the church was not immediately known.
The Philippines, one of the world’s most disaster-prone countries, is often hit by earthquakes and volcanic eruptions due to its location on the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” an arc of seismic faults around the ocean. The archipelago is also lashed by about 20 typhoons and storms each year.