Afghans in Iran

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Afghans in Iran
افغانها در ایران
Total population
c. 5-6 million (estimate)[1]
Regions with significant populations
Tehran province, Khorasan Razavi province, Qom province, Isfahan province, Kerman province, Fars province
Languages
Dari (Persian), Pashto, and other languages of Afghanistan
Religion
Islam (Sunni and Shia)

Afghans in Iran (Persian: افغانها در ایران) are citizens of Afghanistan who are temporarily residing in Iran as refugees or asylum seekers. They form the largest percent of the Afghan diaspora. The first wave of Afghans crossed into Iran after the start of the Soviet–Afghan War in 1979.

According to Afghanistan's Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), there are approximately 3 million Afghan citizens in Iran as of January 2023,[2][3][4] most of whom were born and raised in Iran during the last four decades.[5][6] They are under the care and protection of the UNHCR,[7][3] and are provided time-limited legal status by Iran's Bureau of Aliens and Foreign Immigrant Affairs,[2] without a path to obtain permanent residency.[8] There are also about 600,000 Afghan tourists, travelers, merchants, exchanged students, regular or irregular migrant workers, and others.[9][7][3] According to Hassan Kazemi Qomi, half of Iran's foreign investors are Afghans.[10]

There have been widespread reports of Iranian mistreatment of Afghan migrants and their human rights,[11] and the community is very marginalized.[12] In 2006, about 146,387 undocumented Afghans were deported.[13] Many more continue to experience such events.[14][15] In 2010, six Afghan prisoners were executed by hanging in the streets of Iran, which sparked angry demonstrations in Afghanistan.[16]

Political history and migration

Mughal-Safavid war
.

As neighboring countries with cultural ties,

Hazaras were formed in Torbat-e Jam and Bakharz in Iran. The 1857 Treaty of Paris ended hostilities of the Anglo-Persian War
. The modern day Afghan–Iranian border gradually began to take shape in the second half of the 19th century.

Afghan migrant workers, pilgrims and merchants, who settled in Iran over the years, had by the early 20th century, become large enough to be officially classified as their own ethnic group, referred to variously as Khavari or Barbari.[23] Young Hazara men have embraced migrant work in Iran and other Persian Gulf states to save money for marriage and become independent; such work has even come to be seen as a "rite of passage".[24] Such migration intensified in the early 1970s due to famine, and by 1978, there were an estimated several hundred thousand Afghan migrant workers in Iran.[25]

The Soviet–Afghan War, which erupted in 1979, was the beginning of a series of major waves of refugee flight from Afghanistan.[26] Those who came to Iran often augmented the ranks of migrant workers already there. The new Islamic Republic took place around the same time as the influx of masses of Afghan migrants to other countries, fleeing the plagues of problems in their own country. Iran started recognising those Afghans listed as migrants workers or refugees as legals. They issued them "blue cards" to denote their status, entitling them to free primary and secondary education, as well as subsidised healthcare and food. However, the government maintained some restrictions on their employment, namely prohibiting them from owning their own businesses or working as street vendors.[18]

Most of the early academic attention on these new immigrants was focused on Afghan refugees in Pakistan. Studies on Afghans in Iran came later due to the political situation during the Iran–Iraq War.[23] By 1992, a report by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) estimated that there were around 2.8 million Afghans in Iran. Just 10% were housed in refugee camps; most settled in or near urban areas.[25] For their efforts in housing and educating these refugees and illegals, the Iranian government received little financial aid from the international community.[27] With the fall of the Najibullah government of Afghanistan in 1992, Iran began efforts to encourage refugees to repatriate. During these years, there were many reports of cases of Afghans being harassed by Iranian law enforcement officers. Legal residents had their identity cards confiscated and exchanged with temporary residency permits of one-month validity, at the expiry of which they were expected to have left Iran and have repatriated.[28]

21st century

Since 2002 millions of Afghan citizens living in Iran and Pakistan have returned to Afghanistan.[29][7][30] In 2012, around 173,000 of them were forcefully returned. Over 103,086 more were deported in 2013. Many of the deportees complained of torture and other abuses by Iranian authorities.[8][15] In October 2020 there were 780,000 registered citizens of Afghanistan residing in Iran.[3][4] Most of these were born and raised in Iran during the last four decades.[5][6] In 2015, Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli stated that 2.5 million Afghans resided in Iran, which includes the registered and illegals as well as those who were admitted to the country with Afghan passports and Iranian visas.[31][3] Over 600,000 Afghans living in Iran have returned to Afghanistan in 2022.[32][14] Afghanistan's Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation has acknowledged that approximately 3 million Afghan citizens still remain in Iran as of January 2023.[2]

Social and legal issues

Esfahan
, Iran. (2007)

Afghan refugees have come to Iran since the 1980s, including children and adolescents.

Pashtuns, and other ethnic groups of Afghanistan.[33] One UNHCR paper claims that nearly half the documented refugees are Hazara, a primarily Shi'a group.[34]

In Afghanistan, some people feel that

using birth control violates the tenets of their religion; however, in Iran, attitudes are far different, due to the country's extensive promotion of family planning. Afghans in Iran have moved closer to mainstream Iranian values in this regard; the Iranian influence has even filtered back into Afghanistan.[35] One study in Khorasan has found that while overall fertility rates for Afghan migrant women are somewhat higher than those for Iranian women there—3.9 vs. 3.6—the similarity hides significant age-related differences in fertility, with older Afghan migrant women having a far higher number of children than older Iranian urban women, while younger Afghan migrant women's number of children appears to be approaching the far-lower Iranian urban norm.[36] Contraceptive usage among the same study group was 55%, higher than for local Iranian women.[37]

More broadly, the same conservative men who resisted aggressive attempts by communist governments in Afghanistan to expand women's education and their role in the economy are now faced with the very changes from which they had hoped to shield their families. This shift in family and gender roles was induced by the experience of living as refugees in largely Muslim society.[38]

Some Afghan men married Iranian women during their residence in Iran; however, under Iranian nationality law, the children of such marriages are not recognized as Iranian citizens, and it is also more difficult for the men to gain Iranian citizenship than for Afghan women married to Iranian men.[39] As of 2019 this law has changed and Iranian women in mixed marriages can transfer their Iranian nationality to their children, regardless of the nationality of the child's father.[40]

Although Iranian authorities have made efforts to educate Afghan children, Human Rights Watch reports that many undocumented Afghan children face bureaucratic obstacles that prevent their children from attending school, in violation of international law. Iranian law limits Afghans who have permission as refugees to work to a limited number of dangerous and poorly paid manual labor jobs, regardless of their education and skills.[8]

Marriage with indigenous people

According to statistics released in the year 1995, nearly 24,000 marriages of Iranian nationals have been recorded in Iran, and it is anticipated that nearly the same amount of legal marriage has been recorded. According to Article 1060 of the Civil Code of Iran, the marriage of Iranian women to foreign men with the permission of the government and any foreigner who, without the permission referred to above, will marry an Iranian woman, will be sentenced to one year's imprisonment of up to three years. And the government's important marriages are prohibited. Under Iranian law, Afghan women who marry men in Iran are considered citizens of Iran under Article 976 of the Civil Code and can take Iranian citizenship and their children enjoy the conditions of an Iranian citizen, but if Afghan men marry Iranian women to men Citizenship of Iran does not belong and according to Article 979 of the Civil Code they can only apply for citizenship. Children from foreign marriages with Iranian women up to 18 years of age are considered to be their fathers, and if their fathers lack a degree of residence, they will encounter limitations for people without a degree in Iran. These children can apply for citizenship at the age of 18 years.[citation needed]

In 2020, a new policy allowing Iranian women to pass down their citizenship to their children at birth started to effect. As of mid-November, about 75,000 people had applied for citizenship under the new law.[41]

A new policy allowing Iranian women to pass down their citizenship to their children at birth started to effect from 2020. As of mid-November, about 75,000 people had applied for citizenship under the new law. The new policy particularly affects the children of Iranian women who have married Afghan men. While Iran's nationality laws predate the 1979 Islamic revolution, Mohsen Kazempour, a co-founder of the Datikan Legal Institute in Tehran, said the current bias against foreigners is in part rooted in a nationalist hysteria that followed the revolution and the eight-year war between Iran and Iraq. "Iran was at war with Iraq, and Iraq was supported by many foreign nations," he said. "So the Iranian government was very concerned about the penetration of secret agents in the government or army."[42]

Torture, persecution and deprivation of rights

Forbidden areas to Afghan refugees
The red areas here are where Afghan citizens do not have freedom of movement or allowed to reside there.

Iran is not a signatory to the United Nations Convention Against Torture. This makes Afghans vulnerable to torture in that country. Violence and racism against them has been steadily increasing in the last two decades. It was reported in May 2020 that up to 50 Afghan migrants who crossed into Iran illegally were beaten and thrown in a river, of which half did not survive,[43] while in another incident Iranian forces shot at a vehicle carrying Afghans, resulting in three deaths. These incidents led to protests in Afghanistan.[44] The Iranian government has also failed to take necessary steps to protect its Afghan population from physical violence linked to rising anti-refugee sentiment in Iran, or to hold those responsible accountable.[45][8]

According to recent statistics, a total of 5,399 foreign nationals were in Iranian prisons. Of this, 2,240 had been convicted of drug related offenses, 1,323 of theft and 989 of battery or assault.[46] It was reported in 2010 that around 3,000 Afghan prisoners faced the death penalty in Iran.[47][48] A number of them have been executed by hanging in the last decade.[49][50][51][52][53] Iran imposes the death penalty even for minor drug-related offenses, such as possession of only 30 grams of amphetamines.[54] Afghans nationals are completely prohibited in 15 provinces, and partially prohibited in the other 12 provinces. The Iranian government decided to restrict the presence of Afghan citizens in the provinces via provincial executive orders.[55]

Economy

According to Hassan Kazemi Qomi, half of Iran's foreign investors are Afghans.[10] With a population of 2 million, they have about 10% of the labor market in Iran. Their presence has led to protests by Iranian workers. The Iranian government has also imposed a number of restrictions, including the ban on the use of foreign workers in governmental and non-governmental organizations, and called on all government agencies, non-state actors, companies and contractors to provide their needed labor to Iranian workforce, with numerous penalties, including imprisonment and a fine for the offending employers. However, many employers prefer to hire Afghans due their low wage expectations, lack of insurance requirements, and their high productivity.

Demography

Ethnicity and religious sect

By ethnicity, Afghans in Iran are Hazaras at 40%, Tajiks at 36%, and Pashtuns, Uzbeks and others at 24%.[56] According to the deputy director of the General Directorate for Foreign Affairs, approximately 70% of foreign nationals living in Iran are Shia Muslims and 30% Sunni Muslims.[46]

Gender composition

Based on the 2016 Iranian census,[57] 845,267 (53%) of the Afghan national population in Iran were men and 738,712 (47%) women.

Gender Combination of Afghan Refugees in Iranian Provinces (2016)[57]
Province Population by gender Province Population by gender Province Population by gender
Man Female Man Female Man Female
East Azarbaijan
76 63
North Khorasan
55 38
Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad
896 607
Western Azerbaijan
52 55
Khuzestan
3671 2619
Golestan
9602 8671
Ardebil
15 20
Zanjan
23 17
Gilan
218 91
Isfahan
94773 88351
Semnan
18535 16874
Lorestan
63 36
Alborz
45548 38773
Sistan and Baluchestan
14163 12683
Mazandaran
1818 805
Ilam
12 17
Fars
61198 48049
Markazi
15290 13967
Bushehr
19386 10305
Qazvin
9592 8809
Hormozgan
14301 9894
Tehran
274780 240787
Qom
48759 47608
Hamedan
135 82
Chaharmahal va Bakhtiari
60 31
Kurdistan
13 5
Yazd
28286 23457
southern Khorasan
2619 2426
Kerman
69906 55505
Khorasan Razavi
111396 108046
Kermanshah
26 21

Age

Based on the 2016 census, about 46% were under 20 years old and about 67% were under the 30 years old. Given the 40-year presence history, many of them were born in Iran. The Afghan refugee population were younger than the indigenous population of Iran (31% of Iranians were under the age 20, and 49% of Iranians were under the age of 30). One of the main reason is the high birth rates and the low age of marriage in this population.[57]

Population by age category[57]
Age Group Population Age Group Population
Man Female Total Man Female Total
0–4 90124 85204 175328 40–44 44077 33566 77643
5–9 98288 93099 191387 45–49 34883 27983 62866
10–14 94779 88976 183755 50–54 30474 22329 52803
15–19 89901 83179 173080 55–59 20672 14036 34708
20–24 93028 86973 180001 60–64 16387 9746 26133
25–29 85796 76279 162075 65–69 9436 5626 15062
30–34 66179 55252 121431 70–74 6589 3826 10415
35–39 56910 48545 105455 75+ 7744 4093 11837

Distribution

Residence of Afghan refugees is prohibited in 15 provinces of Iran, except in the other three provinces of

Tehran (except Khojir, district 13
), in the rest of the provinces, they only have the right to reside in some cities. Fatemeh Ashrafi, the reason for the restrictions on the movement of Afghan refugees in Iran, allowed the Iranian government, in accordance with the 1951 Convention, to protect refugees from limiting the displacement of foreign immigrants in their country based on national interests and security issues. [11]

Distribution of Afghans in Provinces of Iran (2016)
Province Population Province Population Province Population
Tehran 515,567
Sistan and Baluchestan
26,846
Western Azerbaijan
107
Khorasan Razavi
219,442
Hormozgan
24,195
Lorestan
99
Isfahan 183,124
Qazvin
18,401
North Khorasan
93
Kerman 125,411
Golestan
18,273
Chaharmahal va Bakhtiari
91
Fars
109,247
Khuzestan
6,290
Kermanshah
47
Qom 96,367
southern Khorasan
5,045
Zanjan
40
Alborz
84,321
Mazandaran
2,623
Ardebil
35
Yazd 51,743
Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad
1,503
Ilam
29
Semnan 35,409
Gilan
309
Kurdistan
18
Bushehr 29,691 Hamedan 217
Markazi
29,257
East Azarbaijan
139

Health and education

According to Tehran Times, 120,000 Afghans in Iran have health insurance.[9] Over 40,000 of them are enrolled in Iranian schools and universities.[9] Their education in Iran is free.[58][59][60]

Repatriation and deportation

Every year large number of Afghans return to Afghanistan from neighboring Iran and Pakistan. Some are deported for overstaying or getting in trouble with the law.[61]

Statistics on the return of Afghan refugees[62][63]
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Voluntary repatriation 117,364 124,615 74,967 225,815 238,384 155,721 74,773 --- --- --- 279,012 217,483 286,226 316,415 248,764
Forced deportation 42,360 53,897 79,410 95,845 146,387 363,369 406,524 322,008 286,662 211,023 250,731 220,846 218,565 227,601 194,764
Total 159,724 178,512 154,377 321,660 384,771 519,090 481,297 --- --- --- 529,743 438,329 504,791 544,016 443,763

In popular culture

Since the 1980s, a number of Iranian movies set in Iran have featured Afghan immigrant characters. One early example is Mohsen Makhmalbaf's 1988 movie The Cyclist, in which the character of the title, a former cycling champion of Afghanistan, gives a demonstration in his town's square whereby he rides his bicycle without stopping for seven days and seven nights, with the aim of raising money for life-saving surgery for his wife. In the end, even after seven days, he continues to pedal endlessly, too fatigued to hear his son's pleas to get off his bicycle.[64] One scholar analyses the film as an allegory which parallels the exploitation that Afghan refugees suffer from in Iran and from which they are unable to escape.[26]

Other notable films with Afghan characters include

Sagkoshi.[26]

Notable people

See also

References

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  4. ^ a b "Refugees and internally displaced persons". The World Factbook. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
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  41. ^ Berger, Miriam (26 December 2020). "Breaking with some Mideast neighbors, Iran now lets mothers give their citizenship to their children". Washington Post. Retrieved 20 September 2023.
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Further reading

External links