From Vice.com:
“War Left Them With Permanent
Disabilities. The Return of the Taliban Is Reopening Old Wounds.”
(MURAD MAJIDI, 17, AN AFGHAN
MIGRANT WHO WAS WOUNDED IN THE BORDER CROSSING AND SAVED BY TURKISH SOLDIERS
AFTER BEING ABANDONED BY HIS FRIENDS, RECEIVES TREATMENT, AT A DEPORTATION
CENTER IN THE TURKISH CITY OF VAN THAT BORDERS IRAN, MONDAY, AUG. 23, 2021.)
The last time the Taliban were in
power in Afghanistan, a rocket struck Nilofar Bayat’s home in Kabul. The attack
killed her brother immediately, and injured her spinal cord, which cost her the
use of her legs. She was just two years old. So when the Taliban returned last
week and overthrew the government, Bayat, now 28, immediately knew she had to
leave. “I know I’m not safe here,” she
told VICE World News. “Because we will be forced to stay at home. People with
disabilities can’t do anything at home. Without sports, their disability will
get worse.” After the attack on her house that changed her life, Bayat grew up
advocating for women’s rights. She became the captain of the national
wheelchair basketball team – which in many ways was a symbol of how far women
in the country have come since the Taliban ruled in the 90s. But all this meant that the return of the
Islamic fundamentalist group put her in danger, especially as women were not
allowed to work, let alone play sports, when they ruled a reign of terror 25
years ago. “The Taliban will kill me,” she said. “I need to get out.”
As fighters walked the streets of
the capital, Saman too was in a panic. She thought about all the Afghans she
helped as a physiotherapist, and what they stood to lose. Saman knows what it’s
like. She was two and a half years old when she lost the use of her legs to
polio, which has yet to be eradicated in Afghanistan, largely due to the
longstanding conflict. “They will never
play basketball. They will never go to shop. They will never drive again. They
will never meet friends in cafes. They will never continue their education,”
she told VICE World News last week in frenzied text messages. “How can I just
stay home? And how can we lose everything as women? For what? Why should we
lose our freedoms? Why?” Saman, whose name has been changed for her protection,
acknowledged that “of course every woman of Afghanistan is at risk,” but for a
community that continuously faces systemic abuse, Saman was right to feel
alarmed. The United Nations recognises the disproportionate impact of armed
conflict on persons with disabilities, who pay a high price for decades of war.
They are more at risk during fighting since it is more difficult for them to
flee; are unable to easily access basic services or assistive devices; are
deprived of education; face social stigma; and are at increased risk of
psychological distress.
One of the most immediate impacts
of the recent conflict in Afghanistan on those with disabilities was
highlighted when the country’s paralympians were forced to pull out of the
Tokyo Games after they could not fly out of Kabul. Hossain Rasouli, who was competing
in men’s Para athletics, and Zakia Khudadadi, who was competing in women’s Para
taekwondo, were forced to give up their Olympic dreams. "Yes, we have not
been able to go to Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games due to Taliban takeover and lack
of commercial flights,” Arian Sadiqi, Chef de Mission Tokyo 2020 of the
Afghanistan Paralympic Committee told VICE World News last week. “However, many
other para-athletes will be affected given the situation that Afghanistan is
currently under.”
(WOMEN WITH DISABILITIES FEAR
THEY WILL NOT BE ABLE TO PLAY SPORTS UNDER TALIBAN RULE. PHOTO: ANKIT MHATRE)
Afghanistan in particular has
among the highest rates of disabilities per capita in the world, with war as
the main cause. Aside from being injured in direct fighting and explosions,
Afghans also suffer from the effects of polio, an indirect cause of conflict. It
is estimated that half the population suffer from depression, anxiety, or
post-traumatic stress. The Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission
found that people with disabilities make up at least 14% of the country’s
population, a number that has increased by 11% in the last 14 years. Human
Rights Watch (HRW) said that at least one in five Afghan households includes an
adult or child with a serious physical, sensory, intellectual, or psychosocial
disability. The situation is especially
dire for women and girls. In a 2020 report, HRW found that decades of war,
gender expectations and entrenched discrimination means women and girls with
disabilities are often seen as a burden on their families and are at increased
risk of violence both in and out of the home. “All Afghans with disabilities
face stigma and discrimination in getting government services, but women and
girls are the ‘invisible’ victims of this abuse,” said Patricia Gossman, who
authored the report.
There has been some progress over
the years. After the Taliban were overthrown by the U.S.-backed government in
2001, NGOs and international organisations stepped up efforts in the sector, to
fill gaps in a health care system decimated by years of war. “They were neglected by the health system then
as they have been recently. During the last two decades the disability
awareness improved, disability was declared a ‘priority to tackle,’ but all the work was left on the shoulders of
the NGOs and international organizations, exactly as in the 90s,” Alberto
Cairo, head of the Physical Rehabilitation Program of the International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), told VICE World News in an email. The ICRC
helped more than 49,500 war-wounded Afghans in the first six months of the year
alone, a number that will likely increase under Taliban rule. The organisation
also has orthopaedic and physical rehabilitation centers across the country,
which provide limb prosthetics and physiotherapy sessions. Over the years, the
ICRC has also introduced sports, particularly wheelchair basketball to
Afghanistan, as a means of rehabilitation and to give young Afghans with
disabilities a new lease in life.
So far, Cairo said the Taliban
“have asked us to keep working as usual, male and female staff.” He said the
Rehabilitation Centre of Kabul remains open, and although not all staff have
been called to work, “the services are provided.” Yet rights groups continue to be skeptical as
to how faithfully the Taliban will uphold their promises to afford Afghans
their rights, especially as recent vows appear to have been broken. The UN said
on Tuesday that they have received credible reports of widespread abuses under
Taliban control including summary executions. Despite saying women can work and
keep going to school, some have already been asked not to return. They have
also targeted journalists and their families, and those who have aided U.S.
forces, even when the Taliban said there would be no vengeance. The group has
also warned of consequences if the U.S. extends its August 31 withdrawal
deadline.
(AFGHAN PARALYMPIC WHEELCHAIR
BASKETBALL PLAYER NILOFAR BAYAT, CENTRE LEFT AND HER HUSBAND ARRIVE AT THE
TORREJON MILITARY BASE JUST OUTSIDE MADRID, SPAIN, FRIDAY, AUG. 20, 2021. SPAIN
HAS FLOWN MORE PEOPLE FROM AFGHANISTAN ON ITS SECOND FLIGHT AS PART OF THE
EVACUATION PROCESS.)
Afghans with disabilities who
have a way out have understandably fled. At least two paralympians secured
humanitarian visas to Australia. Saman told VICE World News that she made it to
Europe over the weekend. And Bayat is now in Spain, after having been evacuated
to Madrid. She said she knew she needed to leave if she wanted to continue her
dream of playing wheelchair basketball. “Fortunately
I received many offers from different cities in Spain, different clubs of
wheelchair basketball. They told me I can go to any city I like with the best
facilities,” she told VICE World News. “I decided to go to Bilboa with my
husband.” Asked what she wants people outside Afghanistan to know about those
with disabilities who have been left behind, Bayat said she is appealing for
foreign countries not to give up on evacuation efforts. “Please save their
lives. There is no more hope, [nothing] to live for in Afghanistan.” Many more
have no way to leave. Another Afghan with a disability who is the breadwinner
for his family, told VICE World News he is worried for his safety. “I am in
danger,” he said. “I don’t know what to do. I don’t want to die here with my
family.” Cairo vowed that ICRC will keep assisting those with disabilities “as
we have been doing in the last 33 years.” But he expressed concern that
“Afghanistan risks again to be forgotten.” “My fear is that the media interest
for Afghanistan is going to disappear soon, taken away by new wars and new
events,” he said. “The international community should keep assisting
Afghanistan with funds and any kind of help. To recover from 42 years of war
will take time.” There is certainly much work left to be done, as uncertainty
and fear are compounded by Taliban rule. Aside from the physical disabilities
they already suffer, Cairo emphasises perhaps an even more crucial need: to
support them mentally. “The psychological trauma when a person loses a limb is
terrible. It is like losing also a piece of mind and heart. To give a new leg
is relatively easy. To heal the internal wounds is much more difficult.”
^ Another Afghani group that is now
threatened and scared for their future under the Taliban. ^
https://www.vice.com/en/article/jg84wy/afghanistan-disabilities-taliban-takeover-kabul
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