Nearly 300 Afghan Families Returning from Pakistan Live Under Tents in Kunduz

Nearly three hundred Afghan migrant families recently returned from Pakistan are living under tents in the Sardura area of Kunduz province, lacking adequate shelter and basic facilities. These families face severe shortages of essential services, and their living conditions are described as worrying.
Local residents say that after their return, these families were settled in an area that lacks the necessary infrastructure for permanent habitation. The absence of suitable housing, limited access to drinking water, and other basic amenities have made their daily lives extremely difficult.
Kunduz, a northeastern province of Afghanistan, has witnessed a surge in the return of migrants from neighboring countries in recent years. With increasing forced expulsions and returns from Pakistan, the need to provide shelter and essential services for returning families has become more urgent.
While the Taliban administration has repeatedly expressed readiness to address the situation of returning migrants, the ongoing reality of hundreds of families living under tents indicates that effective and immediate measures to provide shelter and basic necessities have not yet been implemented. Experts emphasize that urgent humanitarian attention to this situation is a critical and immediate need.




