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“Homeward Journey at Scale: Reflections on Mass Returns from Neighbouring Lands”

Over 3,300 Afghan nationals returned from Iran and Pakistan in one day amid ongoing deportations, highlighting the continuing large-scale movements and humanitarian challenges at the borders.

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“Homeward Journey at Scale: Reflections on Mass Returns from Neighbouring Lands”

On a brisk winter day in early January, the dusty corridors of Afghanistan’s border crossings once again became passageways for a story of displacement and return. Like footprints washed by a rising tide yet reappearing with persistent rhythm, the movement of people — not by choice but by circumstance — reflects a broader pattern of shifts that have defined Afghan lives in recent years. On that day alone, Taliban authorities reported that more than 3,300 Afghan nationals were returned from neighbouring Iran and Pakistan as deportations continued unabated.

The flow of these returnees — 3,273 via Pakistan’s Torkham and Spin Boldak crossings and 98 from Iran through Islam Qala and Pul-e-Abrisham — reminds observers of the man-made currents shaping human movement across borders. In many cases, these returns are not voluntary journeys home filled with joyful anticipation, but compelled repatriations in which families and individuals are carried back into a nation grappling with its own ongoing crises.

The recent surge fits within a larger backdrop of mass returns that have accelerated over the past months, particularly from Pakistan, as enforcement measures tighten and undocumented Afghan migrants find themselves under increasing pressure to leave. Neighbouring governments have intensified their efforts to regulate or remove those lacking legal status, prompting humanitarian concerns about conditions awaiting returnees inside Afghanistan’s borders.

United Nations agencies and rights groups have repeatedly warned that Afghanistan remains a nation struggling with challenges that leave many returnees vulnerable. Limited access to food, shelter, healthcare, and employment — coupled with restrictions on education and movement, especially for women and girls — amplify the hardships that accompany the end of these enforced journeys.

Amid these repeated waves of movement, the daily crossings at border points like Torkham and Spin Boldak carry stories of uncertainty and resilience: families reunited with aged relatives they left years ago, young children returning to a homeland they barely recall, and adults facing the daunting task of rebuilding amidst economic and social fragility. Each arrival is a quiet testament to the complex interplay of policy, geopolitics, and human will that defines displacement and return in our era.

AI Image Disclaimer “Visuals are created with AI tools and are not real photographs.”

Sources KabulNow Amu TV Amnesty International (reporting on deportation context)

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