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Didar News held a special program with the second generation of Afghan refugees The Community Plus program hosted two second-generation immigrants. Nasrin Niknam: Society Plus hosted two second-generation Afghan immigrants in another special program. We had a previous debate on the issue of Afghan refugees, which you can see here. The issue of staying or deporting Afghan refugees has been discussed in the media for months, and all quotations are one-sided and only from the mouths of officials and those in charge. All these issues came together to help Didar News reach out to the successful generation of Afghan migrants and bring their problems to the attention of decision-makers. At the beginning of the meeting, Mohammad Hossein Rezaei, a legal activist, said that he was born in Iran and his family has been living in Iran for more than 40 years. Let's do it. In an Afghan family, only one person can have a driver's license and each person only one car. He continues: Every year, a wave against Afghan refugees is formed and then forgotten, but this wave that has been formed in virtual and real space is no longer called anti-Afghanistan, it is dehumanization. "None of the Afghan migrants who entered Iran legally or have been living here for years have a problem with organization, but in a correct and logical way, not in a way that questions people's human dignity," he says. In the continuation of the program, Sayed Mohammad Taghi Hosseini, an activist of the Afghan refugee section, said: “One of the problems that migrants have is that they have several ID cards with different shapes and names, sometimes some of these cards are used for banking, but others are not. This is the most important and biggest challenge for migrants. He criticized the Ministry of Interior officials and said: Why don't the officials collect all these ID cards so that migrants can use the facilities available and identify and monitor them more easily so that if someone makes a mistake, the police can identify and deal with him. He points to the issue that Hadi Kasaizadeh raised in a debate with Dr. Hesam Salamat about giving 100 million loans to Afghan migrants and says: This is a complete lie and this journalist has said this without research. This is exactly the opposite, that is, migrants. Afghans must deposit 100 million in the bank to be able to use some facilities, and the validity period of these facilities is one year, and if they want to use them again, the bank will check their one-year performance and if they have any violations, they will deal with them. Whenever migrants want to leave Iran, the money is returned to them.