
Trump slams door on Afghan asylum seekers fleeing Taliban
The program, temporary protected status, known as TPS, grants legal status to people from certain foreign countries who are already in the US and have fled armed conflict or natural disasters. It's usually granted for 18 months, with an option of an extension.
About 8,000 Afghans and 7,900 Cameroonians benefiting from this humanitarian protection were affected by the May 2025 decision from the administration to terminate TPS. Afghans in the US first received TPS in 2022, after the Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan in late 2021.
The Taliban enforces a repressive interpretation of Islamic law that includes banning women and girls from attending school or working outside their home. The Taliban emerged in the early 1990s and controlled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001. They were overthrown after the US-led invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, but regained control in 2021 after the withdrawal of US and NATO forces.
In 2023, the Department of Homeland Security extended TPS for Afghans through 2025, as the conditions that triggered the initial designation – namely, armed conflict in Afghanistan – were deemed to be ongoing.
In May 2025, however, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem announced the termination of TPS for Afghans, stating that Afghanistan no longer poses a threat to the safety of its nationals abroad and that Afghan nationals can safely return to their country.
'We've reviewed the conditions in Afghanistan with our interagency partners, and they do not meet the requirements for a TPS designation,' Noem said in May 2025. 'Afghanistan has had an improved security situation, and its stabilizing economy no longer prevent them from returning to their home country.'
Most Afghans who have arrived in the US since 2021 share a fear of persecution by the Taliban. That includes people who worked for the former government, advocated for women's rights or worked with the US military in Afghanistan.
As a migration policy scholar, I believe the cancellation of TPS for these Afghans won't lead to voluntary repatriation, as the fear of persecution by the Taliban remains a serious concern for many.
Instead, it will likely force thousands of people into unlawful residency in the US. That, in turn, would not only leave thousands at risk of deportation but limit their employment opportunities in the US and keep them from financially supporting the families they left behind in Afghanistan.
Unlawful US residency can disqualify Afghans from accessing benefits such as Medicaid and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, a federal program that provides cash assistance and support services to low-income families with children.
For Afghan TPS holders without any other pending legal status – such as asylum claims, for example – the termination also means the loss of work authorization, as their employment authorization document was tied to having TPS. This can cut off thousands of Afghans from financial stability, according to the nonprofit group Global Refuge.
Many Afghans are likely to seek alternative legal pathways to remain in the US, most commonly through the already underresourced asylum process. For these people, the outlook looks daunting. Filing an asylum application with US Citizenship and Immigration Services means joining an unprecedented backlog. Taliban security personnel stand guard as an Afghan woman walks along a street in the Baharak district of Badakhshan province on Feb. 26, 2024. Photo: Wakil Kohsar / AFP via Getty Images / The Conversation
At the end of 2024, nearly 1.5 million asylum applications were pending with USCIS, according to the American Immigration Council, a nonprofit advocacy organization. Most applicants faced estimated wait times of up to six years for a decision.
Asylum applicants are allowed to remain in the US while their application is pending. And they can apply for work authorization, but only after the asylum application has been pending for at least 150 days. However, the work authorization is not issued until a minimum of 180 days has passed since filing for asylum.
So Afghan nationals applying for asylum following the TPS termination face a mandatory six-month period without legal work authorization. This period can stretch even longer, depending on how long it takes applicants to retain an attorney and complete the complex application process.
Like many forcibly displaced populations, Afghans often arrive in the US with extremely limited financial resources.
Forced migration is typically abrupt and unplanned, leaving little opportunity to liquidate assets or withdraw funds. The small amount of cash or valuables that this population manages to carry is often just enough to reach immediate safety.
Against this background, the ability to work is a critical issue for Afghans in the US. Most Afghans in the US are also supporting older parents and immediate or extended family members in Afghanistan, according to unpublished research I'm conducting with my colleagues, Proscovia Nabunya and Nhial Tutlam. This makes timely access to legal employment not only a matter of survival for themselves but also a lifeline for loved ones left behind.
TPS was never intended as a long-term solution. And the number of Afghan nationals who held it as their sole legal status in the US was relatively small – estimated at around 8,000 – compared with the over 180,000 Afghans who have arrived in the US since 2021.
What is more concerning for Afghans in the US, however, are the government's assertions surrounding the termination of TPS for this group. If the US government now maintains that Afghanistan is safe for return, it raises concerns about how this stance may influence the adjudication of Afghan asylum claims.
Although most Afghan asylum applications are grounded in a combination of factors – fears based on nationality, ethnicity, religion and political opinion – labeling Afghanistan as safe for return could undermine claims that rely on nationality as a central basis for protection.
Mitra Naseh is assistant professor of migration, Washington University in St. Louis
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
5 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Trump slams Smithsonian for focusing on ‘how bad slavery was', threatens funding
US President Donald Trump suggested on Tuesday he will pressure the Smithsonian Institution – a premier museum, education and research complex for US history and culture – to accept his demands, just like he did with colleges and universities by threatening to cut federal funding. In a social media post, Trump complained about what he called excessive focus on 'how bad Slavery was.' 'I have instructed my attorneys to go through the Museums, and start the exact same process that has been done with Colleges and Universities where tremendous progress has been made,' Trump said on social media. The Smithsonian, which was established in 1846 and includes 21 museums and galleries and the National Zoo, had no immediate comment. Most of its museums are in Washington. The White House said last week it will lead an internal review of some Smithsonian museums after Trump earlier this year accused it of spreading 'anti-American ideology' and raised alarm among civil rights advocates. The exterior of the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History in Washington. Photo: Reuters When asked if Trump would threaten funding cuts to the Smithsonian based on the findings, a White House official said, 'President Trump will explore all options and avenues to get the Woke out of the Smithsonian and hold them accountable.'


RTHK
6 hours ago
- RTHK
Pakistan deports documented Afghan refugees
Pakistan deports documented Afghan refugees Afghan refugees like Saima and her child face an uncertain future as Pakistan could deport up to one million refugees. File photo: Reuters Afghan refugees in a park near government offices in Islamabad said they had nowhere to go as Pakistan pressures landlords to expel documented families. Among them is Samia, 26, from Afghanistan's Hazara minority, a Shi'ite community long persecuted at home, who gave birth just three weeks ago. "I came here when my baby was seven days old, and now it has been 22 days ... we have no food, and my baby was sick but there was no doctor," she said as she cuddled her son, Daniyal. The United Nations says Pakistan has begun deporting documented Afghans before a September 1 deadline that could force more than a million to leave. The action comes despite about 1.3 million holding refugee registration documents, while 750,000 have Afghan identity cards issued in Pakistan. Samia now lives on the park's wet ground, among 200 families who cook, sleep and dry their belongings there after nights of rain. What little money they have is spent on potatoes or squash, cooked on open fires to share with several people. The women use the washroom in a nearby mosque. The refugees said police officers regularly tell them to leave or risk being taken away, but the police denied any form of harassment. Jawad Tariq, a deputy inspector general, said refugees were only asked to leave voluntarily or move to holding centres. Pakistan, host to millions of Afghans since the 1979 Soviet invasion, has stepped up expulsions under a 2023 crackdown, blaming Afghans for crime and militancy, charges rejected by Kabul. Neighbouring Iran's plan to deport more than a million more adds to a refugee return crisis aid groups call the biggest since the Taliban takeover in 2021. (Reuters)


AllAfrica
6 hours ago
- AllAfrica
Trump slams door on Afghan asylum seekers fleeing Taliban
Thousands of Afghans living in the United States face an uncertain future after a federal appeals court ruled on July 21, 2025, that the Trump administration can end a humanitarian relief program that provided them work permits and protection from deportation. The program, temporary protected status, known as TPS, grants legal status to people from certain foreign countries who are already in the US and have fled armed conflict or natural disasters. It's usually granted for 18 months, with an option of an extension. About 8,000 Afghans and 7,900 Cameroonians benefiting from this humanitarian protection were affected by the May 2025 decision from the administration to terminate TPS. Afghans in the US first received TPS in 2022, after the Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan in late 2021. The Taliban enforces a repressive interpretation of Islamic law that includes banning women and girls from attending school or working outside their home. The Taliban emerged in the early 1990s and controlled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001. They were overthrown after the US-led invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, but regained control in 2021 after the withdrawal of US and NATO forces. In 2023, the Department of Homeland Security extended TPS for Afghans through 2025, as the conditions that triggered the initial designation – namely, armed conflict in Afghanistan – were deemed to be ongoing. In May 2025, however, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem announced the termination of TPS for Afghans, stating that Afghanistan no longer poses a threat to the safety of its nationals abroad and that Afghan nationals can safely return to their country. 'We've reviewed the conditions in Afghanistan with our interagency partners, and they do not meet the requirements for a TPS designation,' Noem said in May 2025. 'Afghanistan has had an improved security situation, and its stabilizing economy no longer prevent them from returning to their home country.' Most Afghans who have arrived in the US since 2021 share a fear of persecution by the Taliban. That includes people who worked for the former government, advocated for women's rights or worked with the US military in Afghanistan. As a migration policy scholar, I believe the cancellation of TPS for these Afghans won't lead to voluntary repatriation, as the fear of persecution by the Taliban remains a serious concern for many. Instead, it will likely force thousands of people into unlawful residency in the US. That, in turn, would not only leave thousands at risk of deportation but limit their employment opportunities in the US and keep them from financially supporting the families they left behind in Afghanistan. Unlawful US residency can disqualify Afghans from accessing benefits such as Medicaid and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, a federal program that provides cash assistance and support services to low-income families with children. For Afghan TPS holders without any other pending legal status – such as asylum claims, for example – the termination also means the loss of work authorization, as their employment authorization document was tied to having TPS. This can cut off thousands of Afghans from financial stability, according to the nonprofit group Global Refuge. Many Afghans are likely to seek alternative legal pathways to remain in the US, most commonly through the already underresourced asylum process. For these people, the outlook looks daunting. Filing an asylum application with US Citizenship and Immigration Services means joining an unprecedented backlog. Taliban security personnel stand guard as an Afghan woman walks along a street in the Baharak district of Badakhshan province on Feb. 26, 2024. Photo: Wakil Kohsar / AFP via Getty Images / The Conversation At the end of 2024, nearly 1.5 million asylum applications were pending with USCIS, according to the American Immigration Council, a nonprofit advocacy organization. Most applicants faced estimated wait times of up to six years for a decision. Asylum applicants are allowed to remain in the US while their application is pending. And they can apply for work authorization, but only after the asylum application has been pending for at least 150 days. However, the work authorization is not issued until a minimum of 180 days has passed since filing for asylum. So Afghan nationals applying for asylum following the TPS termination face a mandatory six-month period without legal work authorization. This period can stretch even longer, depending on how long it takes applicants to retain an attorney and complete the complex application process. Like many forcibly displaced populations, Afghans often arrive in the US with extremely limited financial resources. Forced migration is typically abrupt and unplanned, leaving little opportunity to liquidate assets or withdraw funds. The small amount of cash or valuables that this population manages to carry is often just enough to reach immediate safety. Against this background, the ability to work is a critical issue for Afghans in the US. Most Afghans in the US are also supporting older parents and immediate or extended family members in Afghanistan, according to unpublished research I'm conducting with my colleagues, Proscovia Nabunya and Nhial Tutlam. This makes timely access to legal employment not only a matter of survival for themselves but also a lifeline for loved ones left behind. TPS was never intended as a long-term solution. And the number of Afghan nationals who held it as their sole legal status in the US was relatively small – estimated at around 8,000 – compared with the over 180,000 Afghans who have arrived in the US since 2021. What is more concerning for Afghans in the US, however, are the government's assertions surrounding the termination of TPS for this group. If the US government now maintains that Afghanistan is safe for return, it raises concerns about how this stance may influence the adjudication of Afghan asylum claims. Although most Afghan asylum applications are grounded in a combination of factors – fears based on nationality, ethnicity, religion and political opinion – labeling Afghanistan as safe for return could undermine claims that rely on nationality as a central basis for protection. Mitra Naseh is assistant professor of migration, Washington University in St. Louis This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.