
-
Newcastle host Liverpool amid Isak stand-off, Spurs test new-look Man City
-
Texas Republicans advance map that reignited US redistricting wars
-
South Africa spinner Subrayen cited for suspect action
-
Meme-lord Newsom riles Republicans with Trump-trolling posts
-
Messi ruled out of Miami's Leagues Cup quarter-final v Tigres
-
Trump raises pressure on Fed with call for governor to resign
-
Trump flirts with Ukraine security, with narrow margins
-
US sends three warships near Venezuela coast
-
Celtic held by Kairat Almaty in Champions League play-off
-
North Carolina braces for flooding from 'Enormous' Erin
-
Arsenal could hijack Spurs' bid for Palace star Eze - reports
-
Namibian Shalulile equals South African scoring record
-
PlayStation prices rise as US tariffs bite
-
Games publisher kepler on cloud nine after smash hits
-
Thirteen arrested over murders of Mexico City officials
-
Seville storms past Lyles for Lausanne 100m win
-
India test-fires nuclear-capable ballistic missile
-
Google unveils latest Pixel phones packed with AI
-
Brazil records 65 percent drop in Amazon area burned by fire
-
Threat from massive western Canada wildfire eases
-
England women's rugby coach Mitchell says World Cup favourites' tag 'irrelevant'
-
US ramps up attack on international court over Israel
-
Palace transfer targets Eze and Guehi to start in European tie
-
North Carolina coasts prepare for flooding as Erin churns offshore
-
India test-fires ballistic missile ahead of US tariff hike
-
Antarctic climate shifts threaten 'catastrophic' impacts globally
-
Tall ships sail into Amsterdam for giant maritime festival
-
Trump raises pressure on central bank, calls for Fed governor to resign
-
Woods to head PGA Tour committee to overhaul golf
-
Google packs new Pixel phones with AI
-
How Europe tried to speak Trump
-
Stock markets diverge awaiting Fed signals as tech sell-off deepens
-
Ombudsman gives Gosden another International, Derby hero Lambourn loses
-
Eurovision returns to Vienna, 11 years after Conchita Wurst triumph
-
England expects at Women's Rugby World Cup as hosts name strong side for opener
-
Marseille's Rabiot, Rowe up for sale after 'extremely violent' bust-up: club president
-
Shearer accuses Isak of pouring 'flames on fire' of Newcastle row
-
French champagne harvest begins with 'promising' outlook
-
England unchanged for Women's Rugby World Cup opener against the USA
-
Stock markets diverge as traders eye US rate signals
-
Russia says must be part of Ukraine security guarantees talks
-
Historic Swedish church arrives at new home after two-day journey
-
Winds complicate wildfire battle in Spain
-
Nestle unveils method to boost cocoa yields as climate change hits
-
UK set for more legal challenges over migrant hotels
-
Russia says discussing Ukraine security guarantees without Moscow 'road to nowhere'
-
Torrential Pakistan monsoon rains kill more than 20
-
Record number of mosquito-borne disease outbreaks in Europe: health agency
-
Stock markets diverge after Wall Street tech sell-off
-
Chinese troops swelter through rehearsal for major military parade

'We have nothing': Afghans driven out of Iran return to uncertain future
Hajjar Shademani's family waited for hours in the heat and dust after crossing the border into Afghanistan, their neat pile of suitcases all that remained of a lifetime in Iran after being deported to their homeland.
The 19-year-old and her three siblings are among tens of thousands of Afghans who have crossed the Islam Qala border point in recent days, the majority forced to leave, according to the United Nations and Taliban authorities.
Despite being born in Iran after her parents fled war 40 years ago, Shademani said the country "never accepted us". When police came to her family's home in Shiraz city and ordered them to leave, they had no choice.
But Afghanistan is also alien to her.
"We don't have anything here," she told AFP in English.
Between Iranian universities that would not accept her and the Taliban government, which has banned education for women, Shademani's studies are indefinitely on hold.
"I really love studying... I wanted to continue but in Afghanistan, I think I cannot."
At Herat province's Islam Qala crossing, the checkpoint is usually busy handling the cycle of smuggling to deportation as young men seek work in Iran.
But since Tehran ordered Afghans without the right to remain to leave by July 6, the number of returnees -- especially families -- has surged. More than 230,000 departed in June alone, the United Nations International Organization for Migration (IOM) said.
Since January, more than 690,000 Afghans have left Iran, "70 percent of whom were forcibly sent back", IOM spokesperson Avand Azeez Agha told AFP.
Of the more than a dozen returnees AFP spoke to on Saturday, none said they had fled the recent Iran-Israel conflict, though it may have ramped up pressure. Arrests, however, had helped spur their departures.
- Few prospects -
Yadullah Alizada had only the clothes on his back and a cracked phone to call his family when he stepped off one of the many buses unloading people at the IOM-run reception centre.
The 37-year-old said he was arrested while working as a day labourer and held at a detention camp before being deported to Afghanistan.
Forced to leave without his family or belongings, he slept on a bit of cardboard at the border, determined to stay until his family could join him.
"My three kids are back there, they're all sick right now, and they don't know how to get here."
He hopes to find work in his home province of Daikundi, but in a country wracked by entrenched poverty and unemployment, he faces an uphill climb.
The UN mission for Afghanistan, UNAMA, has warned that the influx of deportees -- many arriving with "no assets, limited access to services, and no job prospects" -- risks further destabilising the crisis-wracked country.
Long lines snaked into tents encircling the reception centre where returnees accessed UN, NGO and government services.
Gusty wind whipped women's Iranian-style hijabs and young men's trendy outfits, clothing that stood out against the shalwar kameez that has become ubiquitous in Afghanistan since the Taliban swept to power in 2021, imposing their strict interpretation of Islamic law.
Deputy Prime Minister Abdul Salam Hanafi inspected the site on Saturday, striding through the crowd surrounded by a heavily armed entourage and pledging to ensure "that no Afghan citizen is denied their rights in Iran" and that seized or abandoned assets would be returned.
Taliban authorities have consistently called for "dignified" treatment of the migrants and refugees hosted in Iran and Pakistan, the latter having also ousted hundreds of thousands of Afghans since the latest decades-long war ended.
- 'Have nothing' -
Over one million Afghans have already returned to Afghanistan this year from both neighbouring countries. The numbers are only expected to rise, even as foreign aid is slashed and the Taliban government struggles for cash and international recognition.
The IOM says it can only serve a fraction of the returnees, with four million Afghans potentially impacted by Iran's deadline.
Some of the most vulnerable pass through the agency's transit centre in Herat city, where they can get a hot meal, a night's rest and assistance on their way.
But at the clean and shaded compound, Bahara Rashidi was still worried about what would become of her and her eight sisters back in Afghanistan. They had smuggled themselves into Iran to make a living after their father died.
"There is no man in our family who can work here, and we don't have a home or money," the 19-year-old told AFP.
"We have nothing."
F.AbuShamala--SF-PST