The Ministry of Interior has ordered all paths be blocked that are used for human trafficking to Iran.
Many young people said they are struggling with severe economic conditions, and this crackdown will only cause more problems.
Mohammad Nabi, a resident of Kapisa, and his family came to Nimruz province and are living in a small hotel.
“We were unable to purchase passports and visas. Now when we arrived in Nimroz, the Islamic Emirate closed the borders. Where can I go with these children I have with me?” he said.
Many young people arrived in Nimroz province seeking to cross the border to Iran. They called on the Islamic Emirate to provide job opportunities in the country.
“There is no opportunity for work. Everyone is forced to leave the country to find food,” said Hashmatullah, a resident of Kapisa.
“I am not happy about leaving the country but I am obliged to,” said Faqir Ahmad, a resident of Kapisa.
The department of Refugees and Repatriation of Nimruz said that the Ministry of Interior ordered all border forces to prevent human trafficking in a bid to stop the illegal migration of citizens to the neighboring countries.
“Afghanistan is going toward development, and the Afghans must try to spend their energy on the development of their own country,” said Sadiqullah Nasrat, head of the department.
The Interior Minister of Iran, Ahmad Wahidi, said the border tension between Afghanistan and Iran was due to misunderstandings and that they contacted the Islamic Emirate’s officials to address the issue.
This comes as video making the rounds on social media show that Iran has deployed more troops along the border with Afghanistan in the Islam Qala port in western Herat province.
“They (Islamic Emirate forces) came to the border. They were given instructions. The contact was made with their officials in Kabul and they asked them to return. They went back. Of course, this was repeated once again. We call on the officials in Kabul to (address) it,” Wahidi told reporters in Iran.
But the people living along the Durand Line are worried about the rising tensions.
“There was a clash on the border between Iran and Afghanistan. We want this tension to be solved via negotiations,” said Ahmad Zubair, a resident of Herat.
Meanwhile, the Islamic Emirate called for a resolution of issues through diplomatic means with the neighboring countries.
“We have six neighbors. Many of them are Muslims. We want to have a brotherly engagement,” said Sirajuddin Haqqani, the acting Minister of Interior.
.According to the local sources, the tensions on the border arose after the Iranian border forces resisted the paving of a street by the Islamic Emirate forces in the Islam Qala port area.—Tolonews