U.S. tells Afghan allies either return to Taliban-run home or go to DR Congo.
Trump has closed the door on a move to the United States for the more than 1,100 Afghans who fled Afghanistan fearing persecution by the Taliban for having worked with U.S. forces.
Afghans
rushed to flee their country in the days after the US military withdrawal and
the Taliban's return to power in Afghanistan. Photo by Wakil
KOHSAR/AFP/File
Shawn VanDiver, a U.S. veteran who heads AfghanEvac, a group seeking to help former Afghan allies, said he was briefed that the Trump administration was looking to offer the Afghans a choice to go to DR Congo or otherwise return to Afghanistan.
The United
States is looking to give former Afghan allies stuck in Qatar a choice between
emigrating to the war-torn Democratic Republic of Congo or returning to their
Taliban-ruled homeland, an activist said Tuesday.
President
Donald Trump’s administration, which has made a sweeping crackdown on
immigration a signature policy, had given a March 31 deadline to close a camp
where more than 1,100 Afghans were staying at a former U.S. base in Qatar.
The Afghans
went through the base for processing while seeking to move to the United
States, fearing persecution by the Taliban for having worked with U.S. forces
before they withdrew and the Western-backed government collapsed in 2021.
He said he expected the Afghans to decline to go to the African country, which has its own refugee crisis after years of war, including ongoing hostilities linked to Rwanda.
“You do not
relocate vetted wartime allies, more than 400 of them children, from American
custody into a country in the middle of its own collapse,” he said in a
statement.
“The
administration knows this. It is the point,” he said alleging a way to force
the people back to Afghanistan.
After the US
withdrawal in 2021, evacuees from Afghanistan fled to escape the Taliban, seen
here landing at Hamad International Airport in Qatar’s capital Doha from Kabul. Photo
by KARIM JAAFAR/AFP/File
Senator Tim
Kaine, a Democrat, called the idea “insane.”
“We told
these Afghans that we would help ensure their safety after they helped us,” he
said.
“We have an
obligation to follow through on our promise because it’s the right thing to do,
and because going back on our word will only make it harder for us to build the
kinds of partnerships we may need to advance our national security in the
future.”
More than
190,000 Afghans have resettled in the United States following the Taliban’s
return in a program initiated by former president Joe Biden but initially
backed by many Republicans.
Trump has
dismantled the broader U.S. refugee resettlement program and ordered a halt to
processing for Afghans after one Afghan, who had worked with U.S. intelligence
and suffered post-traumatic stress disorder, shot two National Guard troops in
Washington last year, one fatally.
AFP reached
out for comment from the State Department on the purported plan, which was
first reported by The New York Times.
https://nationalpost.com/news/world/us-afghan-allies
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