Kabul: Amnesty International has asked the international community to cease the wrongful expulsion of Afghan refugees and to protect their needs in accordance with international human rights laws.
Afghan refugees endure arbitrary arrests and family separations in host countries, as well as human rights violations when they return to Afghanistan, according to the rights group, IANS reported.
"Millions of Afghan refugees are being expelled across the globe, and that number keeps climbing day by day. In host countries, they are facing arbitrary arrests and family separations; upon return, they are facing human rights violations amidst one of the most severe humanitarian crisis in the world," Amnesty said in a post on X.
"The unlawful expulsions of Afghan people must stop, and people with international protection needs must be safeguarded as per international human rights law," it added.
The agency's statement comes as international agencies report an increase in the deportation of Afghan refugees from neighbouring nations. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) have repeatedly said that the return of Afghan refugees must be safe and dignified and called for greater international support for returnees.
Earlier in May, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Turk, warned against the continued forced repatriation of Afghan refugees and asylum-seekers from host countries to Afghanistan, calling it a violation of international human rights and refugee law.
"Afghan women, children and men continue to be pushed out of countries where they had sought safety, forcing them to return to Afghanistan against their will and exposing them to grave risk," he said.
According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), nearly 270,000 Afghans have been deported to Afghanistan since the beginning of the year, almost mainly from Iran and Pakistan, with relatively smaller numbers from Turkey and Tajikistan. This comes in addition to the over 1.2 million Afghan refugees deported from Iran and 150,000 from Pakistan last year.
The UN human rights agency stressed that women and girls, individuals affiliated with the former Afghan government and its security forces, media workers, civil society, and members of the LGBTIQ+ community remain at grave risk of reprisals and human rights abuses.
"Returning individuals at serious risk of human rights violations involuntarily to Afghanistan runs contrary to the core international law principle of non-refoulement. I urge States to abide by their international legal obligations and protect Afghans by not taking any action that exposes them to irreparable harm upon return," Turk said
A 2025 UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) and the UN Human Rights Office (OHCHR) report, titled “No Safe Haven", revealed that Afghan refugees forcibly deported to Afghanistan experienced a range of serious human rights violations, including arbitrary arrest, detention, torture, and ill-treatment at the hands of the Taliban authorities.
While several European Union (EU) member states seek a more coordinated approach to returns of Afghan nationals, the UN human rights chief also expressed concerns over mounting reports that some countries in Europe are now resuming or considering deportations, despite the very severe human rights situation in Afghanistan.
Turk said that the proposed new EU rules on returns, which are currently under review, have also sparked concerns, as these could weaken human rights safeguards and expose people to harm.
“I strongly caution against all involuntary returns to Afghanistan in the absence of individualised risk assessments, which are required by and must be carried out in accordance with international human rights and refugee law,” he stated.