Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammd Javad Zarif held discussion with his Afghan counterpart in a phone call on Monday to discuss the recent drowning incident at the border which involved a number of Afghans trying to cross border illegally.
Share It :
Mohammad Javad Zarif and Mohammad Hanif Atmar held the discussion over the phone, Afghanistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement on Sunday.
A number of Afghan media outlets alleged on May 1 that more than 40 illegal migrants had been arrested by Iranian border guards and thrown into Harirud River.
The top diplomats discussed joint investigations into the matter and the creation of respective inquiry task forces.
Zarif assured his Afghan counterpart that an Iranian investigative team would soon begin looking into the matter, while Atmar notified the Iranian minister that an Afghan delegation had already visited the northwestern Afghan province of Herat, where the river partly flows, and begun a probe.
The ministers agreed that joint investigative bodies could meet in Herat and the northwestern Iranian holy city of Mashhad to share their findings.
The Afghan Foreign Ministry said the investigations would seek to verify credibility of the media reports, and prevent any future incidents.
On Tuesday, US Acting Assistant Secretary for South Asia Alice Wells used the uncorroborated reports as an excuse to describe, what she called, Iran’s “cruel treatment and abuse of Afghan migrants” as “horrifying.”
The Iranian Foreign Ministry posted a tweet on its English-language page in response, denouncing the remarks as a “bitter joke.” It called the reports “tragic” but “unrelated to Iran.”
The US’s 2001 invasion of Afghanistan under the banner of “war on terror” has been followed by an unremitting cycle of violence that has created a sustained wave of migration out of the Central Asian country.
Afghans began moving to Iran in large numbers after the Soviet invasion in 1979 and they continued to migrate for work through decades of conflict, sending money to relatives back home that helped bolster Afghanistan’s struggling economy.
In 2017, there were approximately 2.5 to 3 million Afghans in Iran, according to Iranian government estimates cited by the United Nations.
Officials say Iran spends $8 billion on Afghan migrants every year.