Afghanistan Finds 17 Bodies of Migrants Drowned by Iran Border Guards

Afghanistan Finds 17 Bodies of Migrants Drowned by Iran Border Guards
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Afghanistan Finds 17 Bodies of Migrants Drowned by Iran Border Guards

Afghanistan Finds 17 Bodies of Migrants Drowned by Iran Border Guards

Afghan authorities said on Thursday they had recovered 12 more bodies of migrants who were thrown into a river by Iranian border guards this month to stop them from entering the country, bringing the incident's death toll to 17.

Afghan officials and survivors now say a group of about 50 men from Herat province who were trying to enter Iran were detained by its border guards and later forced into the Harirud river shared between Iran, Afghanistan and Turkmenistan.

"Fifty Afghans were thrown into the river. Seventeen bodies have been found so far," Abdul Ghani Noori, the governor of Gulran district of Herat where the incident occurred, said on Thursday.

Noori had said on Sunday that the authorities had retrieved five bodies from the Harirud river.

On Thursday he said a preliminary investigation showed that the migrants were thrown into the river at gunpoint in an area called Zulfiqar in Iran.

A day after the incident, Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Seyed Abbas Mousavi issued a statement saying the "incident" took place on Afghan soil.

"Border guards of Iran denied the occurrence of any events related to this on the soil of our country," he said.



Turkish Police Seize 825 Kg of Heroin, Says Interior Minister

Turkish riot police stand guard in front of the Justice Palace in Istanbul March 31, 2015. REUTERS/Osman Orsal
Turkish riot police stand guard in front of the Justice Palace in Istanbul March 31, 2015. REUTERS/Osman Orsal
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Turkish Police Seize 825 Kg of Heroin, Says Interior Minister

Turkish riot police stand guard in front of the Justice Palace in Istanbul March 31, 2015. REUTERS/Osman Orsal
Turkish riot police stand guard in front of the Justice Palace in Istanbul March 31, 2015. REUTERS/Osman Orsal

Police have seized 825 kilogrammes of heroin and arrested 30 people in a string of raids largely in southern Türkiye, Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said on Wednesday.

Straddling Asia and Europe, Türkiye lies on several major smuggling routes and is the main entry point for heroin on the European market, according to AFP.

"In operations across seven provinces, centred in (the southern city of) Adana.. we seized 825 kilogrammes (1,818 pounds) of heroin and arrested 30 suspected drug traffickers," he wrote on X.

In a simultaneous operation, police raided 38 different addresses in Adana, Hakkari, Hatay, Istanbul, Van, Diyarbakir, and Mersin, seizing unlicensed weapons and "a large quantity" of digital material, he said.

Heroin continues to be the most commonly used illicit opioid within the European Union and "increasingly relies on maritime routes and in particular the use of global container traffic and ferries" departing from Türkiye, Europol's 2024 analysis of the EU drug market said.

The report said Turkish criminal networks continue to dominate the wholesale trafficking of heroin to the European market.