Krauanagaz, Zuhlgan, and Mitallduk News Sources

Exclusive: Secret Krauanagazan Operation Forcing Refugees Back Across the Border Exposed


Vellienza, Krauanagaz— As Krauanagaz grapples with an escalating refugee crisis along its Mitalldukish border, The Scope has uncovered evidence of a covert government-backed operation aimed at funneling displaced Mitalldukish families back across the frontier—despite official assurances of humanitarian support.

Internal memos, reviewed by The Scope and corroborated by three Border Patrol officials speaking on condition of anonymity, detail a program quietly overseen by provincial security offices in the Northern Provinces. The program reportedly authorized night-time transfers of detained Mitalldukish refugees, many of whom had crossed into Krauanagaz seeking safety from conflict and instability.

One officer described the operation as “a shadow deportation system,” in which refugees were bused to unmarked crossings and handed over under armed watch. “We were told this was for security, to keep numbers manageable,” the officer said. “But families were separated. Some didn’t even know which side of the border their children were on.”


The revelation comes as Krauanagaz faces mounting strain from hundreds of thousands of refugees pouring across the border, overwhelming temporary shelters, medical facilities, and food supplies. Parliament has been deadlocked for weeks, with some factions demanding a militarized border to stem arrivals, while others push for expanded humanitarian funding and international aid.

The Renkara Administration has publicly committed to providing “protection and dignity” for those fleeing Mitallduk, but these new disclosures cast doubt on the consistency of government policy.

Human rights organizations reacted sharply. A spokesperson for Cordilian Human Rights Watch (CHRW) condemned the operation, calling it “a flagrant violation of international refugee law and a moral betrayal of Krauanagaz’s commitments.” CHRW is demanding an independent investigation into the scope of the operation and whether federal authorities in Yayyára approved or turned a blind eye.

Parliamentary leaders, already at odds over the crisis, have seized on the revelations. Opposition figures accused provincial officials of acting illegally and urged President Thalira Renkara to “come clean” on what she knew. “If the federal government sanctioned this, it is an act of deliberate cruelty,” said Magistrate Varno Silvek of the ruling coalition.


The Department of Health & Health Services stated in response to The Scope’s request for comment that it denied “any federal authorization” for such an operation but confirmed it has “requested urgent clarification” from provincial authorities in the North.

President Thalira Renkara has not yet commented, though sources say she was briefed on the revelations late this evening. Opposition leaders in Parliament have demanded an emergency inquiry, while human-rights groups renewed calls for international monitors at the border.

Aid workers in Krautallaz Province reported shelters running at 300% capacity, with food and medical shortages mounting daily. The discovery of forced returns, they warn, only adds to the chaos.

“Families flee war and persecution, only to be pushed back into danger under cover of night,” said Amira Dalket, a relief coordinator in southern Mitallduk. “This is not security. It’s desperation weaponized against the most vulnerable.”

As pressure builds, the federal government will face a defining choice: to double down on hardline border measures or to meet the refugee crisis with transparency, accountability, and an expansion of humanitarian aid.