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Home > World > Half of Deportees Are Women: 1.5 Million Forced Back to Crisis-Hit Afghanistan

Half of Deportees Are Women: 1.5 Million Forced Back to Crisis-Hit Afghanistan

The IOM warns Afghanistan faces a major crisis as 1.5M migrants were deported from neighbors in 2025, nearly half women and girls at risk of poverty, early marriage, and violence. The Taliban reject UN concerns, claiming women’s rights are protected, but activists say freedoms remain severely restricted.

Published By: Mohammad Saquib
Published: August 9, 2025 18:26:14 IST

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) has warned that Afghanistan is confronting one of the largest waves of forced deportations in recent history, with 1.5 million migrants deported and returned from neighboring countries this year alone, Tolo News reported.

According to the organization, Pakistan’s ongoing decision to deport Afghan migrants is pushing the country toward a severe crisis without urgent international support.

Over Four Million Afghans Have Already Been Forced to Return from Pakistan and Iran Since 2023

Farhan Haq, Deputy Spokesperson for the UN Secretary-General, said, “International Organization for Migration is urgently calling for international support as Afghanistan faces one of the largest return movements in recent history. Since September 2023, more than 4 million Afghans have returned from Iran and Pakistan, with over 1.5 million returning in 2025 alone,” Tolo News added.

In a related development, UN Women highlighted in a report that women and girls constitute nearly half of the deported migrants. The agency warned that these women and girls face significant threats upon their return to Afghanistan, including poverty, early marriage, violence, and unprecedented restrictions.

As Tolo News detailed, the UN Deputy Spokesperson stated, “Women and girls represent 1/3 of returnees from Iran so far in 2025 and about half of all returnees from Pakistan. The report voiced that, like all women and girls in Afghanistan, returnee women and girls face increased risks of poverty, early marriage, violence, exploitation, and unprecedented restrictions on their rights, movements, and freedoms.”

Responding to these concerns, Afghanistan’s caretaker government dismissed the UN’s warnings as unfounded and asserted that women’s rights are being safeguarded.

Taliban Rejects Allegations of Violation of Women’s Rights

Hamdullah Fitrat, Deputy Spokesperson for the Islamic Emirate, said, “The Islamic Emirate has prevented any form of forced marriage and Bad Dadan (‘giving away a daughter,’ which typically involves settling a dispute between families or tribes by marrying off a girl from one family to a man from the other). Women are given inheritance rights, their voices are heard, their cases are processed in courts, and especially the complaints section of the Ministry of Vice and Virtue has addressed thousands of women’s complaints,” as reported by Tolo News.

However, women’s rights activists remain concerned. Tafsir Siyahposh said, “Today we all witness that, unfortunately, the opportunities that were available to women returning from abroad are not available in Afghanistan. But we are still trying to persuade the Islamic Emirate government to consider the rights and freedoms of women.”

The warnings about the consequences of mass deportation come amid ongoing forced returns from Iran and Pakistan, while key issues around women’s education and employment continue to draw international criticism and remain unresolved.

(Inputs From ANI)

Also Read: Children and Women Bear the Brunt as Afghanistan Hunger Crisis Deepens Amid UN Aid Request

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