| Total population | |
|---|---|
| ~150,000 | |
| Regions with significant populations | |
| Moscow | |
| Languages | |
| Pashto,Dari,Hazaragi,Tajik,Turkmen,Russian |
Russian Afghans areRussian citizens and non-citizen residents born in—or that have ancestors from—Afghanistan. They are the second largestAfghan community in Europe afterGermany. A third of the population lives inMoscow, and the largest community is found around the Sevastopol Hotel, which is home to thousands of Afghan residents and many Afghan-run businesses.[1] In 2007 theUNHCR reported many, including children of officials who worked for the pro-Soviet government in Kabul during the 1980s, who have failed to gain refugee status.[2] Refugee status approval rate had been between 2% and 5% and about 30% for temporaryasylum applications.[2] Many Afghans had entered Russia throughUzbekistan andTajikistan, and were blocked from making refugee application under the “safe third country” rule.[2] Between 1997 and end of 2007, only 844 Afghans[2] were granted refugee status in Russia. Between 2002 and 2007, only 548 Afghans[2] were voluntarily repatriated from Russia with the help ofUNHCR.
In 2021, the Russian government requested that 1,000 Afghans be allowed to fly from Afghanistan to Russia following the2021 Taliban offensive.
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