Local News

Iranians grapple with whether to flee the country

14 March 2026
This content originally appeared on Trinidad Guardian.
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Af­ter bombs ex­plod­ed near her home in the east­ern Iran­ian city of Golestan, hair­dress­er Merve Pourkaz de­cid­ed to leave.

Pourkaz, 32, said she trav­eled near­ly 1,500 kilo­me­ters (932 miles) to an alpine bor­der cross­ing in the hopes of reach­ing the safe­ty of the near­by Turk­ish city of Van.

“If they let me, I will stay in Van un­til the war ends,” she told The As­so­ci­at­ed Press re­cent­ly while wait­ing at the cross­ing. “If the war doesn’t end, maybe I’ll go back and die.”

Pourkaz is one of the 3.2 mil­lion peo­ple in Iran who the U.N. refugee agency es­ti­mates have been dis­placed since the U.S.-Is­rael war with Iran start­ed. While some are seek­ing shel­ter in safer parts of Iran or one of its neigh­bor­ing coun­tries, oth­ers are re­turn­ing from abroad, head­ing to­ward the fight­ing to pro­tect their fam­i­lies and homes.

So far, rel­a­tive­ly few peo­ple have cho­sen to leave: The U.N. es­ti­mates that on­ly about 1,300 Ira­ni­ans have fled via Turkey each day since the war start­ed, and on some days, more peo­ple re­turn to Iran than de­part. But Iran’s neigh­bors and Eu­rope are grow­ing in­creas­ing­ly con­cerned about a pos­si­ble mi­gra­tion cri­sis should the war drag on and are mak­ing con­tin­gency plans.

As Pourkaz was en­ter­ing Turkey, Leila Ra­bet­nezhad­fard was head­ed the oth­er way.

Ra­bet­nezhad­fard, 45, was in Is­tan­bul prepar­ing to mar­ry a Ger­man uni­ver­si­ty pro­fes­sor when the fight­ing start­ed. She post­poned the cer­e­mo­ny and left for home in Shi­raz, in south­ern Iran.

“How can I feel safe in Is­tan­bul when my fam­i­ly is liv­ing in Iran dur­ing the war?” said Ra­bet­nezhad­fard, ex­plain­ing that bring­ing her fam­i­ly to Is­tan­bul wasn’t an op­tion be­cause her apart­ment is small, her broth­er needs med­ical care, and life there is ex­pen­sive.

“I will not leave Iran un­til the war ends,” she said.

Flee­ing the fight­ing

The U.N. has warned that con­tin­ued fight­ing will like­ly push more Ira­ni­ans to flee their homes.

As in the 12-day con­flict last year, many Ira­ni­ans are now shel­ter­ing in place, with­out mon­ey to flee or per­haps be­cause of U.S. Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump’s Feb. 28 warn­ing.

“Stay shel­tered. Don’t leave your home. It’s very dan­ger­ous out­side. Bombs will be drop­ping every­where,” he said.

Al­though large num­bers of Ira­ni­ans haven’t fled the coun­try yet, peo­ple have been leav­ing ma­jor cities for the rel­a­tive safe­ty of the coun­try­side bor­der­ing the Caspi­an Sea north of the cap­i­tal, Tehran, ac­cord­ing to the In­ter­na­tion­al Or­ga­ni­za­tion for Mi­gra­tion.

“Move­ment out of Iran ap­pears lim­it­ed main­ly be­cause peo­ple are pri­or­i­tiz­ing stay­ing with their fam­i­lies, as well as the safe­ty of their fam­i­lies and prop­er­ty, and due to se­cu­ri­ty con­di­tions and lo­gis­ti­cal con­straints,” said Sal­vador Gutier­rez, chief of the IOM’s mis­sion in Iran.

If Iran’s crit­i­cal in­fra­struc­ture is de­stroyed, that could lead to waves of peo­ple try­ing to cross in­to one of Iran’s neigh­bors: Pak­istan, Afghanistan, Turk­menistan, Azer­bai­jan, Ar­me­nia, Turkey and Iraq.

“If Tehran, a city of 10 mil­lion peo­ple, doesn’t have wa­ter, they’re go­ing to go some­where,” said Alex Vatan­ka, a fel­low at the Mid­dle East In­sti­tute in Wash­ing­ton.

Iran is al­ready grap­pling with one of the world’s largest refugee pop­u­la­tions: rough­ly 2.5 mil­lion forcibly dis­placed peo­ple most­ly from Afghanistan and Iraq.

Neigh­bors brace for im­pact

If the cri­sis deep­ens, aid groups say the most like­ly des­ti­na­tions for refugees are Iran’s bor­ders with Iraq and Turkey, which stretch rough­ly 2,200 kilo­me­ters (1,367 miles) through rough alpine ter­rain that is home to many Kur­dish com­mu­ni­ties and are dif­fi­cult to po­lice.

Turkey had a so-called open-door pol­i­cy that al­lowed mil­lions of Syr­i­an refugees to en­ter the coun­try dur­ing their coun­try’s long civ­il war. But it has aban­doned that ap­proach for var­i­ous rea­sons.

In­stead, it has pre­pared plans to shel­ter Iran­ian refugees in “buffer zones” along the bor­der, or in tent cities or tem­po­rary hous­ing in­side Turkey, the coun­try’s Hur­riyet news­pa­per quot­ed Turk­ish In­te­ri­or Min­is­ter Mustafa Cift­ci as say­ing.

Ira­ni­ans who have fled the war will like­ly not seek refugee sta­tus in Turkey be­cause asy­lum claims might take years to process, if at all, said Sara Karakoyun, an aid work­er at the in­de­pen­dent Hu­man Re­source De­vel­op­ment Foun­da­tion based near the bor­der.

“They don’t want to wait in lim­bo for years for a refugee sta­tus they might not get,” she said.

Turkey’s de­fense min­istry said in Jan­u­ary that Turkey had hard­ened its bor­der with Iran by adding 380 kilo­me­ters of con­crete walls, 203 op­ti­cal tow­ers and 43 ob­ser­va­tion posts.

Turkey will like­ly send troops to se­cure its bor­der and tight­ly con­trol the flow of peo­ple in­to the coun­try while seek­ing Eu­ro­pean Union funds to help deal with refugees, said Ric­car­do Gas­co, an an­a­lyst at the Is­tan­Pol In­sti­tute.

Eu­rope taps net­work to pre­pare for the worst

The re­la­tion­ship be­tween the EU and Turkey was re­de­fined by the Syr­i­an refugee cri­sis a decade ago. Near­ly two-thirds of the 4.5 mil­lion Syr­i­ans flee­ing the civ­il war end­ed up in Turkey. Many then made their way to Eu­rope via small boats.

In 2016, Brus­sels and Ankara forged a mi­gra­tion deal where the EU of­fered Turkey in­cen­tives and up to 6 bil­lion eu­ros ($7.1 bil­lion) in aid for Syr­i­an refugees on its ter­ri­to­ry to per­suade Ankara to stop tens of thou­sands of mi­grants from set­ting out for Greece.

Aid groups said that deal cre­at­ed open-air pris­ons with squalid con­di­tions. But for the EU lead­er­ship, the deal saved peo­ple, kept many mi­grants from reach­ing EU ter­ri­to­ry, and bet­tered the lives of refugees in Turkey.

Re­new­al of that deal is up this year, but Turk­ish cit­i­zens have soured on Syr­i­an refugees and an­ti-im­mi­grant right-wing par­ties have surged in pop­u­lar­i­ty in parts of Eu­rope.

And an­oth­er refugee cri­sis is al­ready un­der­way even clos­er to Eu­rope, with fight­ing in Lebanon be­tween Is­rael and Hezbol­lah dis­plac­ing more than 800,000 peo­ple so far.

“We’ve got a sit­u­a­tion (in the Mid­dle East) that could have grave hu­man­i­tar­i­an con­se­quences right at a time where hu­man­i­tar­i­an fund­ing has been com­plete­ly slashed,” said Ninette Kel­ley, chair of the World Refugee & Mi­gra­tion Coun­cil, point­ing to the Trump ad­min­is­tra­tion’s gut­ting of US­AID. “Is the world ready for an­oth­er hu­man­i­tar­i­an dis­as­ter?”

Mc­Neil re­port­ed from Brus­sels. As­so­ci­at­ed Press writ­ers Suzan Fras­er in Ankara, Turkey, Fay Abuel­gasim in Cairo, and Qas­sim Ab­dul-Zahra in Bagh­dad con­tributed to this re­port.

By SAM Mc­NEIL and SER­RA YEDIKARDES

KAPIKOY BOR­DER CROSS­ING, Turkey (AP)