Afghan families cross Chaman borders to their country in Nov 2025.

Over One Million Afghans Repatriated From Pakistan: UNHCR

ISLAMABAD, Nov 27, 2025: Thousands of Afghans, including refugees and asylum-seekers, are returning to Afghanistan under mounting pressure despite the country’s grave human rights and humanitarian situation.

UNHCR in a statement confirmed that more than one million Afghans have returned from Pakistan to their country in 2025. “In the right circumstances, this would be something to celebrate,” said Philippa Candler, UNHCR Representative in Pakistan. “But under the current conditions, it raises more concerns than solutions.”

UNHCR has been scaling up its presence at border crossing points, where returnees – many of them women and children – are arriving cold, exhausted, and in urgent need of support. The agency and its partners are providing immediate assistance, including temporary shelter, relief items, and protection services.

However, with winter intensifying and humanitarian resources severely strained, the gap between needs and available support is widening rapidly. Without sustained and expanded assistance, the sustainability of returns from both Iran and Pakistan remains in question. If returnees cannot reintegrate effectively, onward movement becomes inevitable.

In Afghanistan, nine in 10 people live in poverty and the combined impact of economic crisis, unemployment and weakened public services is leaving families exposed. Over 2.2 million people have returned from Pakistan and Iran in 2025 with little to rebuild their lives, while recent earthquakes have deepened their hardship.

With governments’ support declining, UNHCR is calling on individual and private donors to help raise at least 35 million to deliver life-saving assistance in Afghanistan and other hard-hit regions. These funds will help vulnerable families stay warm, safe and supported through the harsh months.

UNHCR also stressed that significant protection needs for Afghans persist inside Pakistan, especially for individuals at heightened risk due to their profiles, past affiliations, or vulnerabilities. Many require legal assistance, documentation, and community-based protection services to ensure their safety and dignity.

UNHCR urged Pakistan to ensure that Afghans with specific protection needs are exempted from the provisions of the Illegal Foreigner Repatriation Plan (IFRP) and allowed to remain safely in the country. Doing so would uphold Pakistan’s long-standing tradition of hospitality and protection, which has safeguarded millions over decades, it said.

Related:

Over 300 Afghan Artists Move PHC Against Forced Repatriation.

42 Afghan Families Leave, Kesu Refugee Camp Closed.

Afghan Refugees Start Returning from Chitral.

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