Kolbar
Cross border labourer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A kolbar (Persian: کولبر) or kolber (Kurdish: کۆڵبەر) or cross-border labor[1] is a worker who is employed to carry goods on their back across the borders of Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey legally or illegally.[2] Most kolbars live in Iranian Kurdistan, where the Kurdish provinces are among the poorest in the country. Kolbars also live in Turkish Kurdistan and to a lesser extent Iraqi Kurdistan. Since kolbar work is mostly considered illegal, kolbar workers have no insurance, retirement plans and unions. Among the kolbars are highly educated young people, who have no job because of high unemployment in Kurdish provinces.[3] According to Iranian statistics, only in the Kurdistan Province more than twenty thousand people depend on being a kolbar for sustenance.[4] The phenomenon of kolbari is tied to the internal colonialization of the Kurdish region in Iran.[1]
Border regions where kolbars are active. | |
| Occupation | |
|---|---|
| Synonyms | Cross-border laborer, Kolber |
Occupation type | Laborer, Smuggler |
Activity sectors | Transport, Smuggling |
| Description | |
| Competencies | Carrying goods across borders, endurance, survival skills |
Education required | Informal, no formal training (usually learned through experience) |
Fields of employment | Kurdish regions (Iran, Iraq, Turkey, Syria) |
Related jobs | Porter, Smuggler |
Etymology
The word kolbar is Kurdish and consists of two parts: kol, meaning "back", and bar, meaning "load".[5] The term kolbar therefore means "one who carries a load".[6] The word kolbari or kolberi refers to border work in which kolbars carry goods on their backs across the borders of Iran, Iraq, and Turkey.[7]
Working conditions

Kolberi is a relatively recent development. Although smuggling has long existed in the border regions, kolberi in its present form emerged only decades after the 1979 Iranian Revolution.[1] Extensive unemployment and poverty has pushed some residents of several Iranian provinces into this dangerous informal cross border couriering, which involves importing goods into Iran via unofficial routes.[8] Goods are carried across difficult mountain border areas either on the backs of kolbars or by pack animals and brought into nearby border towns and villages. Typical items include televisions, air conditioners, heaters, cigarettes, vehicle tires, clothing, and textiles.[9] Illegal goods such as alcohol, weapons, and narcotics are also reported, though rarely, to be smuggled across the border. The trafficking of such items is considered more dangerous and more clearly criminal than the transport of ordinary merchandise.[8]

Kolberi is particularly widespread in Iran’s border provinces.[9] Eastern Kurdistan is widely described as one of the poorest regions of Iran, a situation often attributed to long-standing state policies that have limited investment and development in the area. Compared with other regions of the country, economic growth has remained restricted, while agriculture and industry have developed only weakly, contributing to high unemployment.[5] Many people take up this work to survive in conditions of deep poverty.[10]
Estimates of the number of kolbars vary widely. As of 2025, most sources placed the total at about 80,000 to 170,000, although one estimate put the figure as high as 300,000 in 2021. Some reporting suggests that the number rises during winter, when other employment options are more limited. Most kolbars are men, but the workforce also includes women and children, and their share has been reported to be increasing.[8]
Kolberi is widely regarded as one of the country’s most hazardous forms of work.[9] Kolbars work under very harsh conditions and face numerous dangers, including encountering landmines left from the Iran–Iraq War, falling in steep mountainous terrain, and dying from exposure during winter storms.[7] Furthermore, since this occupation has been declared illegal by the Iranian government, many people are killed each year by shots fired by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard border troops. In both Iran and Turkey many young male and female kolbars have been shot dead by government forces.[5][11][12] From 2012 to 2023, at least 589 kolbars were killed and 1,617 were injured.[10]
The proportion of women, children and people with an academic degree has increased in recent years as a result of the economic crisis in the region.[citation needed] Female kolbars dress as men to reduce the risk of sexual assault and to avoid social pressure.[13]
Legal status
The legal status of kolbars is ambiguous. Although Iran’s Islamic criminal law does not specifically criminalize kolbars and some kolbars receive permits, transporting goods in this way can still fall under Iran’s 2013 anti smuggling law, which criminalizes smuggling.[8] Kolbari is not clearly defined in Iranian law and is not treated by the Islamic Republic’s legal system as a recognized occupation. As a result, kolbars are generally outside the labor protections that apply to formal work, including rules on insurance and workplace safety. This lack of legal recognition has been described as leaving them especially exposed to abuse, exploitation, and persistent injustice.[8]
In the Kurdish areas of Iran, border security is handled by the IRGC under orders from the Supreme Leader. They have authorization to kill people who cross the border illegally.[14] Border officials are frequently reported to mistreat kolbars, including verbal harassment and humiliating treatment. Reports also describe border guards using excessive force along well known kolbar routes, most often by shooting, but also through physical assaults. These incidents have resulted in deaths and injuries, and are often described as occurring without warning and with little accountability.[8]
Kolbars who are caught bringing in goods subject to import tariffs may be prosecuted. When prosecutions proceed to criminal trial, such proceedings are generally considered unlikely to meet international standards of fairness.[8]
In recent years, the Iranian parliament has tried several times to recognize the profession of kolbari as a legal activity and to push through a bill for this, but this has repeatedly failed.[citation needed]
Kolbar in the media
The situation and working conditions of Kolbar are rarely discussed in the media, usually only in the form of short reports on regional websites such as Telegram about deaths of Kolbar.
The film A Time for Drunken Horses by director Bahman Ghobadi provides a brief glimpse into the everyday life of kolbars.[15] The term kolbar is also mentioned sporadically in books and newspapers, such as a few articles from the Kurdish media broadcaster Rudaw.[16]
Job creation for kolbars
In September 2020, the Barakat Foundation launched an event called "Kak Barakat" (Job Creation for Kolbars in Border Provinces) to create employment opportunities for kolbars by collecting plans from entrepreneurs and idealists. Around 3,000 employment projects are planned to be launched before the end of the current year, with funding of about 100 billion tomans. The projects target kolbars in the provinces of Kermanshah, West Azerbaijan, and Kurdistan, and are expected to generate nearly 10,000 direct and indirect jobs. Most of the created jobs will likely be small-scale or home-based.[17]