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Return of millions of Afghans fuels terror potential, experts say

2025-09-26
KABUL: A massive spike in millions of migrants forced back into impoverished Afghanistan by Pakistan and Iran could fuel the militant Islamic State group activities, diplomatic and security sources fear.

Around 2.6 million Afghans have returned since January, including many who have spent decades abroad or who are setting foot in Afghanistan for the first time. `The risk that IS-Khorasan sees these newly arrived Afghans as a potential re cruitment pool is high,` HansJakob Schindler, a former coordinator of the UN committee monitoring militant groups, said.Security in Afghanistan has vastly improved since the Taliban won their insurgency against the Nato-backed government and returned to power in 2021. However, the local branch of IS a rival jihadist group with a foothold in eastern Afghanistan carries out periodic attacks and remains a threat to Taliban rule and the wider region.

`Since August 2021, the group has continued to recruit disgruntled Taliban as well as Afghans that are not part of the new regime, Schindler said. The UN warned in July of a `permissive environmentfor a range of terrorist groups... posing a serious threat to the security of Central Asian and other countries`.

It said the most serious threat is from the IS, with 2,000 fighters, who have carried out deadly attacks in Russia, Iran and Pakistan in the past few years. While the Pakistani Taliban, a separate but closely linked group to the Afghan Taliban, has triple the fighters, it is focused on a campaign against the Pakistan government`s security forces.

Islamabad has consistently aceused Afghanistan`s rulers of giving safe haven to militant groups. TheTaliban government has repeatedly claimed that there are `no longer any terrorist organisations` operating in Afghanistan.

`Foreigners` in their own country The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has predicted that up to four million Afghans could return to the country by the end of the year. Upon arrival, `they face enormous challenges, without jobs, housing, or access to basic services,` notes Indrika Ratwatte, the UN`s humanitarian coordinator in the country. `They may become vulnerable to negative coping mecha-nisms, including exploitation by armed groups.` According to the World Bank, nearly half of Afghanistan`s 48 million people live below the poverty line, and nearly a quarter of 15-29 year-olds are unemployed. `We already know that some Afghans join terrorist groups not out of conviction, but out of `economic necessity,`` a European source said.

Afghans who have spent decades abroad are considered outsiders when they arrive in Afghanistan, said Amina Khan of the Institute for Strategic Studies (ISSI) in Islamabad.Some will hold resentment towards Pakistan, which took away their businesses and properties.

`They`re the perfect fodder for these transnationalterroristgroups that are operating within the region,` she said.

According to Moscow, Afghanistan is home to approximately 23,000 fighters from 20 different organisations. `The greatest concern is the activity of the Afghan branch of (IS)... which has training camps in the country,` noted Russian Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu at the end of August.-AFP