From the CBC:
“After the Taliban takeover,
Afghans in Canada call on Ottawa not to let their country, families be
forgotten”
(CBC News spoke with these Afghan
Canadians who are calling on Ottawa not to let their country or loved ones be
forgotten: Nazaneen Qauomi, left; Rustam; Sediqa Nawrozian and Mohammad Hashim
Nazarwal. CBC News has agreed to identify Rustam by his first name only because
his brother, a human rights activist, has not been able to make it out of
Afghanistan.)
Thousands of delicate purple
blooms sit bathed in sunlight against a background of towering jagged slopes in
the Afghan province of Herat, their distinct fragrance gently sweetening the
air as they await their fate. Inside, each bloom contains just three fragile
red threads, carefully hand-plucked to produce the world's most expensive
spice: saffron. But this year, as harvest season approaches, the fate of the
flowers, picked almost exclusively by women farmers, is in the hands of the
Taliban, who will decide if the women will be allowed to gather the blooms, if
they'll be picked at all or left to rot. For Nazaneen Qauomi, it's as if the
saffron blooms themselves symbolize the future not only for the farmers but for
all of Afghanistan. After immigrating to Canada in 2014, Qauomi recently
visited her home country to create a social entrepreneurship program with a
group of women farmers meant to provide them with microloans to eventually
launch their own businesses. "Saffron
was the biggest hope they had," Qauomi told CBC News from her Toronto
home. But everything changed when the Taliban swiftly took over as the U.S.
made its exit from the country in August. Afghans who escaped their rule
decades earlier watched as the country seemed to be plunged back in time
virtually overnight. "It was a
shared pain that we all felt and a repeated history that we all saw," said
Qauomi. "Especially for my mom, it wasn't easy watching the news, and
again repeating all their history of how we used to escape from city to city,
how we were afraid of the bombs." Now, two months after that familiar
reality so many tried to forget has once again set in, Afghans like Qauomi fear
that as the international community threatens to sideline the Taliban for human
rights violations, ordinary Afghans, including women and minorities, will
suffer in the process. They are pleading with the world and Canada in
particular not to allow their country and their loved ones still there to be forgotten.
'How are they going to
survive?' "We need the world's attention for Afghanistan … not only
thinking about what Afghan women should wear but thinking about the biggest
problems that people are facing and those are poverty, lack of access to
education, lack of access to health centres," said Qauomi. "All the women who lost their jobs,
who are the breadwinners. How are they going to survive?" Rustam, a
Canadian citizen, narrowly escaped Afghanistan after the Taliban took over. He'd
travelled to Kabul to visit his father dying from COVID-19 just before the
Taliban moved in. But now he fears for his brother left behind and other human
rights defenders like him who he says are likely to be targeted by the Taliban.
CBC News has agreed to identify
Rustam only by his first name out of concerns for the safety of his brother,
who has a wife and three children but remains stuck in Afghanistan despite
working on projects funded by the Canadian government. "There are a
lot of people that have contributed immensely to Canadian projects like my
brother but unfortunately they're stuck in the pipeline. These people are
highly educated people and they're worried about their future, what will happen
to their kids," Rustam said. "I
was one of the lucky ones."
A chance encounter Having
buried his father, Rustam was due to fly back to Canada on Aug. 18. But just
days earlier, the Taliban had taken control of Hamid Karzai Airport. Rustam tried twice unsuccessfully to reach
the airport gate amid tear gas and bullets, but gave up after hours of waiting,
worried for the wellbeing of his mother and wife who had secured the paperwork
to join him in Canada. On his third attempt, it was the same. The Baron
Hotel gate, where the Canadian government had told him to show up, was flooded
with people. The family was going to turn back when a boy, around 15 years old,
seemingly helping people navigate the area for a small fee, asked where he
wanted to go. Rustam was hesitant. It was impossible to know whom to
trust. He told the boy he needed to reach Canadian soldiers and gave him $5.
The boy told him to follow and together, they wove through the crowds to
another gate where he was able to speak directly to an American soldier who
connected him with the Canadians. Days later, the crowded sewage canal near
Abbey gate that he, his mother and wife trudged through to make it to safety
was blown up in a suicide bombing. Rustam has no idea if the boy who saved his
life survived. "That kid, actually, he's probably the reason I'm
here," he told CBC News. "It was because of him that I was able to
find a way … I hope he is OK."
'They are at risk because of
me' Sediqa Nawrozian never intended to leave Afghanistan. The
women's rights activist with a master's degree in public law had published
several books back home. A member of the Shi'a minority, she had been in
Halifax for a conference on women's leadership in 2016 when her brother called
and told her not to come home. The
Taliban had tracked down her address and showed up asking for her, threatening
her family, he told her. Overnight, Nawrozian became a refugee, separated from
her family and facing an uphill climb to find work in a country where she had
no experience and where her credentials might not be recognized. In the
years since, Nawrozian, now a Canadian citizen, has acquired numerous
certificates but has had trouble finding work in her field of expertise, with
COVID-19 making the task that much harder. For now, she volunteers to teach
women in Toronto's Thorncliffe and Flemingdon Park neighbourhoods to sew as she
tries to secure paperwork for her family to flee. "I'm thinking
about my family because they are at risk because of me and I'm here now. What
happens with them?" Nawrozian said. "Not just my family. All
the minority community in Afghanistan is at risk, all the families that their
daughters, their wives, their members work for the women's rights, work for the
human rights, against the Taliban. All those families are now at risk. They
don't know what will happen for them in the future. That's my concern."
'Talking doesn't mean being a
friend' Mohammad Hashim Nazarwal had been in Afghanistan for his mother's
funeral when the Taliban seemed to be encroaching on Kabul. No one seriously
believed the capital would be taken, but Nazarwal remembers the day he realized
the U.S. wasn't going to stop them. Afghan security forces "left
their humvees on the road, changed their clothes, left their uniforms and took
taxis home," he told CBC News. "The
whole Afghanistan operation was a failure," Nazarwal said after returning
to Toronto. "Lives are lost, resources are lost … the common guy never
benefited." Still, he said, for the U.S. to leave as suddenly as it
did has meant ordinary Afghans are being punished for not stopping the Taliban
when even foreign forces failed to quell them. What's needed now, he
said, is dialogue with the Taliban.
In a statement to CBC News,
Global Affairs Canada said it "remains committed to Afghanistan" and
has announced an additional $50 million in humanitarian assistance since Aug.
26 for Afghanistan and neighbouring countries on top of the $27.3 million already
allocated for Afghanistan this year. "If
the Taliban choose to ignore fundamental human rights — the rights of women,
girls, and minority groups — they should expect international isolation,"
the statement said. But talking doesn't mean recognition, said Nazarwal.
"Talking doesn't mean being a friend. There should be a channel to
dialogue." "It's such a
passive policy only to sit until America comes on … this is against democratic
laws, it is harming the Canadian policy, prestige, there is a responsibility
for the Canadian government to act. "This is the beginning of
tragedy…. If the Canadian government
doesn't pay attention to this, tomorrow it will be [too] late. The same
mistakes will be repeated in another form."
^ Coming on 2 months since the
world abandoned Afghanistan to the Taliban Terrorists and most of the world
continues to do little to nothing to get their own Citizens and their Afghan
Helpers out. The more ordinary people continue to talk and write about what is
going on inside Afghanistan hopefully the more the Politicians will start to
keep their promises to help. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/afghanistan-taliban-canada-1.6215669
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