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Afghanistan’s economy buckles as millions return from Pakistan and Iran, UNDP warns

Afghanistan’s economy buckles as millions return from Pakistan and Iran, UNDP warns
Afghan refugees arrive near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in Chaman on October 30, 2025, ahead of their departure for Afghanistan. (AFP/File)
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Afghanistan’s economy buckles as millions return from Pakistan and Iran, UNDP warns

Afghanistan’s economy buckles as millions return from Pakistan and Iran, UNDP warns
  • Nine in 10 Afghan families are skipping meals, selling belongings or taking on debt to survive
  • Overlapping shocks from mass returns and natural disasters have deepened Afghanistan’s crisis

KARACHI: Afghanistan’s economic recovery is buckling as nine in 10 households are forced to skip meals, sell belongings or take on debt to survive, the United Nations said on Wednesday, warning that mass returns are exacerbating the country’s worst crisis since the Taliban returned to power.

A United Nations Development Program report said nearly one in 10 overseas Afghans has been forced back home, with more than 4.5 million returnees since 2023, mainly from Iran and Pakistan, swelling the population by 10 percent. On top of that, earthquakes, floods and drought have destroyed 8,000 homes and strained public services “beyond their limits.”

QUAKES, FLOODS AND HUNGER

A survey of more than 48,000 households found that more than half of Afghanistan’s returnees have skipped medical care to buy food and 45 percent rely on open springs or unprotected wells for water.

Nearly 90 percent of returning Afghan families are in debt, owing $373 to $900, up to five times the average monthly income of $100 and nearly half of annual per-capita gross domestic product, the UNDP said.

In areas with high numbers of returnees, one teacher serves 70 to 100 students, 30 percent of children work and joblessness among returnees reaches 95 percent. The average monthly income is 6,623 Afghanis ($99.76), while rents have tripled.

|The UNDP warned that without urgent support to strengthen livelihoods and services in high-return areas, overlapping crises of poverty, exclusion and migration will deepen.

It said sustaining aid is critical as donor pledges have plunged since 2021, covering only a fraction of the $3.1 billion that the UN sought for Afghanistan this year.

The Taliban government appealed for international humanitarian assistance after a deadly quake struck eastern Afghanistan in September and it has formally protested Pakistan’s mass expulsion of Afghan nationals, saying it is “deeply concerned” about their treatment.

The Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation, the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs and a government spokesperson did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

WOMEN BEAR THE BRUNT

Participation by women in Afghanistan’s labor force has fallen to 6 percent, one of the lowest globally, and restrictions on movement have made it nearly impossible for women who head households to access jobs, education or health care.

Kanni Wignaraja, UN assistant secretary-general and UNDP regional director for Asia and the Pacific, said, “In some provinces one in four households depend on women as the main breadwinner, so when women are prevented from working, families, communities, the country lose out.”

Households headed by women, accounting for as many as 26 percent of returnee families in some districts, face the highest risk of food insecurity and secondary displacement.

The UNDP urged Taliban authorities to allocate more resources and called on donors to lift restrictions on female aid staff.

“Cutting women out of frontline aid work means cutting off vital services for those who need them most,” Wignaraja said.


After Islamabad blast, Pakistan urges global cooperation against terrorism, rebuilding trust in multilateralism

After Islamabad blast, Pakistan urges global cooperation against terrorism, rebuilding trust in multilateralism
Updated 4 sec ago

After Islamabad blast, Pakistan urges global cooperation against terrorism, rebuilding trust in multilateralism

After Islamabad blast, Pakistan urges global cooperation against terrorism, rebuilding trust in multilateralism
  • Suicide blast in Islamabad and militant assault in Wana kill at least 15 people amid rising militant violence in Pakistan
  • Deputy PM Dar urges revival of multilateral cooperation, says terrorism and global crises demand “collective resolve”

ISLAMABAD: Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar on Wednesday condemned two high-profile recent militant assaults in Pakistan, saying the attacks “will never shake or weaken” the nation’s resolve to fight terrorism and calling for renewed global commitment to dialogue and cooperation.

At least 12 people were killed and 36 injured in a suicide blast outside a district court in the Pakistani capital on Tuesday. 

The attack followed an attempted assault by militants on a cadet college in Wana, in the northwestern South Waziristan district, a day earlier. Both incidents came amid a surge in violence linked to the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), an outlawed group that Islamabad says operates from Afghanistan. Kabul denies this. 

“Pakistan categorically rejects acts of terrorism in all forms and manifestations, whether they take place in Islamabad, as we witnessed yesterday, or anywhere else in the world,” Dar said in his address at the Inter-Parliamentary Speakers’ Conference in Islamabad, organized by Pakistan’s Senate to promote dialogue among legislatures from around the world. 

“These cowardly acts will never weaken our national resolve. They reaffirm our conviction that dialogue, understanding, and partnership are the only sustainable path to peace and security.”

Pakistan has seen a sharp rise in militant attacks, particularly by the TTP, since the Afghan Taliban returned to power in Kabul in 2021. Islamabad says many TTP leaders and fighters have taken refuge across the border and accuses Afghan authorities of failing to prevent cross-border incursions. They reject the charge, saying Pakistan’s security challenges are a domestic issue. 

Dar said the recent attacks underscored that terrorism “recognizes no boundary, religion, gender, ethnicity or race,” adding that such violence demanded a united international response.

He warned that the world was undergoing a “profound global transformation,” with geopolitical rivalries, economic divides, climate crises and terrorism “threatening the cooperative spirit that sustained peace for decades.”

“Multilateralism must not only be preserved, it must be revitalized through openness, inclusion and the active participation of people’s representatives,” the deputy PM said. “We must rebuild trust in international cooperation based on dialogue, diplomacy, mutual respect and shared responsibility.”

Dar said forums like the Speakers’ Conference were crucial to restore faith in global institutions, adding that peace, security and development “go hand in hand.” He urged governments to ensure accountability and inclusion so that “the benefits of peace and growth reach all people.”

The two-day Inter‑Parliamentary Speakers’ Conference (ISC) in Islamabad has drawn parliamentary delegations from more than 40 countries across Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East. 

Among the nations represented are ֱ, Malaysia, Palestine, Algeria, Barbados, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, Kenya, Tajikistan, Morocco and the Maldives. 

The conference, organized under the auspices of the Senate of Pakistan and chaired by Yusuf Raza Gilani, is convening under the theme “Peace, Security and Development” and is seen by Islamabad as a key vehicle to strengthen parliamentary diplomacy and global cooperation.