Afghanistan's interim foreign minister met with his Iranian counterpart on June 21 in Tehran as tensions persist between the two neighbors after the deaths in May of Afghan migrants at the border.
Iran's state news agency IRNA published a photo on June 21 of the meeting between Afghanistan's Mohammad Hanif Atmar and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, both wearing face masks.
The two-day visit aims to discuss "recent unfortunate events (and) find solutions to avoid them happening again," Afghanistan's Foreign Ministry wrote on June 20 on Twitter, without elaborating.
Atmar heads "a high-level delegation including Afghan political, economic and security officials," IRNA said, citing a statement from the Iranian Foreign Ministry released earlier.
The visit follows controversy over the May deaths of several Afghan migrants who were allegedly forced into a river by Iranian border guards and drowned.
Afghan officials claim the migrants died while they were illegally crossing into neighboring Iran from Herat Province.
Eighteen bodies, some bearing signs of torture and beatings, were recovered from the Harirud River while other migrants were reported missing in an incident that sparked anger and protests in Afghanistan.
One Afghan official said 55 migrants were forced into the river.
Iranian authorities have dismissed the claims, saying the incident occurred inside Afghanistan's territory.
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani ordered an investigation of the drownings, a move welcomed by the United States at a time of heightened tensions between Washington and Tehran.
The meeting also comes after an incident earlier this month in the central Iranian city of Yazd in which three Afghans died and several others were injured after a car chase with police, Iranian media reported.
According to one Iranian official, the driver of the vehicle "defied police instructions and failed to stop at a checkpoint."
According to UN refugee agency UNHCR, around 3.5 million Afghans, including almost 1 million refugees, live in Iran.
Tens of thousands returned to Afghanistan after the start of the novel coronavirus outbreak, but as restrictions have eased in hard-hit Iran, many are again seeking work there.