CIS Official Warns Middle East Crisis Could Increase Migration Pressure on Turkmenistan
Growing instability in the Middle East could trigger large-scale migration flows that may affect countries bordering Iran, including Turkmenistan, according to a senior security official from the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). The warning was issued by Evgeny Sysoev, head of the CIS Anti-Terrorism Center, during a meeting of the heads of competent authorities of CIS member states, according to the Azerbaijani newspaper Bakinskiy Rabochiy. Sysoev said the worsening international situation, particularly developments in the Middle East, had created conditions that could lead to significant migration movements and a humanitarian crisis similar to those seen during conflicts in Libya and Iraq. While all CIS countries could face consequences from such a scenario, he said the greatest pressure would likely fall on states sharing borders with Iran, specifically Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Turkmenistan. The comments come as regional governments closely monitor the wider effects of instability in the Middle East. Turkmenistan, which shares a 1,148-kilometer border with Iran, is one of the countries most directly exposed to any potential population movements resulting from a prolonged crisis. Reuters has previously reported that Turkmenistan’s border with northeastern Iran has been used as an evacuation route for foreign nationals leaving Iran during periods of heightened instability. Sysoev also highlighted ongoing counterterrorism cooperation among CIS member states. According to his figures, security agencies across the bloc prevented more than 2,500 terrorist and extremist crimes in 2025, including more than 300 attempted terrorist attacks. He said authorities disrupted more than 200 terrorist and extremist cells, shut down nearly 900 sources and 300 channels of terrorist financing, and blocked almost 19,000 online resources containing radical content. More than 2,300 criminal cases related to terrorism and extremism were opened, while more than 1,500 people were prosecuted. Authorities also persuaded more than 100 terrorists and more than 2,000 extremists to abandon destructive activities, he added. The warning follows recent signs that developments in neighboring Iran are already having an economic impact on Turkmenistan. As previously reported by The Times of Central Asia, disruptions to trade routes and supplies from Iran have contributed to rising prices for food, household goods, construction materials, and cigarettes across the country.
