Since September 2023, greater than 2.43 million undocumented Afghan migrants have returned from Iran and Pakistan.
Girls and women account for about half of the returnees from Pakistan, whereas their share amongst these coming back from Iran has been steadily rising, reaching round 30 per cent in June.
The escalating tempo of returns is straining Afghanistan’s overstretched humanitarian system, with ladies and women bearing the brunt of the affect, reported the Gender in Humanitarian Action Working Group, a consortium of humanitarian actors led by UN Women and the UN reproductive well being company (UNFPA).
Vulnerabilities on the border
Girls and women are arriving with little safety or help.
“A tent could be my solely safety. I’ve no acceptable garments or hijab to put on, no meals to eat, no contact quantity and no family to stick with,” one lady informed UN Girls on the border.
These touring with out a mahram – a male guardian – face specific dangers. Interviews and discussions carried out by Working Group revealed stories of extortion, harassment and threats of violence at border crossings.
“They took 6,000 rupees (about $21) and gave me solely 2,000 again. Now, I have no idea the place to go together with this cash,” mentioned a girl at Torkham. In Islam Qala, others reported “mistreatment and harassment…inflicting worry and misery.”
Heightened safety dangers
Returnees face rising publicity to gender-based violence, early and compelled marriage, trafficking and transactional intercourse – exacerbated by a scarcity of primary assets.
A humanitarian employee in Kandahar recounted: “A widow with 4 daughters was seeking to see if she may promote one or two daughters to somebody right here to have cash for survival.”
Humanitarian companies report a essential scarcity of protected areas and Psychological Well being and Psychosocial Help Companies (MHPSS), particularly at border crossings, the place many ladies arrive distressed and disoriented.
Shelter, livelihoods and schooling
Throughout provinces, ladies cite shelter, livelihoods and women’ schooling as high wants.
“We’d like a spot to remain, an opportunity to be taught and a strategy to earn,” mentioned a returnee lady in Nangarhar province.
Solely 10 per cent of women-headed households dwell in everlasting shelters, and almost 4 in ten worry eviction. In Herat, 71 per cent of girls reported lease disputes, and 45 per cent of women-headed households have been residing in insufficient housing.
“Many households lack enough monetary assets to afford meals and primary requirements,” mentioned a girl in Herat.
Girls who beforehand labored in trades comparable to tailoring or handicrafts now wrestle to restart on account of a scarcity of instruments, restrictions on motion, and restricted networks or documentation.
Wanting forward
With pressured returns anticipated to proceed, humanitarian companies urge the scale-up of gender-responsive providers, together with protected areas, psychological well being care, livelihood help and schooling entry.
UN Girls and its companions are calling for elevated funding and sustained worldwide help to satisfy the pressing and long-term wants of Afghan returnee ladies and women.