From Yahoo:
“Aid groups urge U.S. to help
Afghan allies "before it's too late"”
Tens of thousands of Afghans who
worked alongside the U.S. during two decades of war and reconstruction may be
at high risk in Taliban-run Afghanistan, according to a group of international
advocacy groups including Amnesty International, Oxfam, Freedom House and
nearly 100 other organizations. In a letter to several senior U.S. officials,
the groups expressed frustration with the Biden administration's failure to
evacuate at-risk Afghans more quickly. "We
call on the Biden Administration to prioritize their safe evacuation before it
is too late," the letter warned. "Some
of these individuals assisted U.S. and allied armed forces. Others worked for
or alongside U.S.-based and funded organizations to secure women's rights,
establish a free press, or provide desperately needed humanitarian assistance
to their countrymen and women," the groups said. "All are now bound
by their shared fear for their safety. If the White House does not move to evacuate
them with haste, it will leave an indelible stain on this Administration's
stated commitment to a foreign policy centered on human rights and its repeated
commitments to support at-risk Afghans."
The letter, exclusively obtained
by "Face the Nation," is dated October 28 and addressed to White
House national security adviser Jake Sullivan, Secretary of State Antony
Blinken, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and others. In it, the organizations
urge the Biden administration to act now to evacuate and resettle a broader
spectrum of at-risk Afghans, and to reveal its strategy for doing so.
The letter expressed
disappointment in "the Biden Administration's overly narrow list of
priority stakeholders for evacuation." The administration is prioritizing
American citizens, legal permanent residents and family members of those two
categories, as well as embassy employees and recipients of special immigrant
visas (SIV). "While these
individuals are undoubtedly deserving of U.S. evacuation support, thousands of
other Afghans face an immediate need for protection due to their affiliation
with the U.S. Government," the advocates argued. "The failure to
prioritize them as well imperils their lives."
The letter also highlighted
reports from the United Nations as well as international human rights monitors
like Amnesty and news organizations: "The Taliban is targeting Afghans,
including those who have worked with U.S. and allied armed forces, as well as
women's rights advocates and other activists, with retaliatory killings and
violence." It concludes: "If the U.S. does not bring these vulnerable
Afghans to safety, it will have failed to uphold its commitment to human rights
and turned its back on the very causes of human dignity and freedom it claims
to uphold.
Asked about the letter on
"Face the Nation," Blinken said that the administration is working on
evacuations from Afghanistan "24/7." "We have teams of several
hundred people at the State Department and also in other parts of our
government working on this every single day, starting with any remaining
Americans, and, of course, Afghans at risk," Blinken explained. "We
will work it until we make good on our commitments. We have a program that, you
know, involves those who applied for special immigrant visas. Those are Afghans
who worked closely with us, with the defense, with the military, with our
diplomats, we're working on that."
There has been much coverage of
the challenges facing Afghans who worked with the U.S. military, but there has
been less attention paid to those at-risk Afghans who worked for
nongovernmental organizations, the media or U.S. government-funded projects.
The letter cited their work as "no less significant" than those SIV
applicants and called on the Biden administration to prioritize this group of
Afghans who may apply for P-2 visas as part of the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program.
Asked about the number of those in need of evacuation, Blinken said,
"We've got about somewhere in the vicinity of seven or eight thousand
people who have clearly qualified for the [SIV] program, and in one way or
another, we're working to get credentialed and to bring out, along with their
immediate family members." Blinken
did not give a number on additional P-2 applicants for whom the advocacy groups
are appealing. He did say that the U.S. is "doing everything we can to
make good on our ongoing commitments, including the Afghans at risk that we
want to help."
The administration's recently
resigned top diplomat for Afghanistan, Zalmay Khalilzad, told "Face the
Nation" last week that even the total number of American citizens who
remain in the country is not entirely clear to the State Department, "I
think it's very likely that it'll be in hundreds." He explained that the
department has tried to get in touch with as many people with U.S. citizenship
or residency as possible, but that "some were ambivalent about going or
staying. Some wanted to bring 65 members of their families who were not
Americans with them. If they couldn't bring all of them, they were not willing
to leave themselves. So, lots of issues."
The State Department has directly
facilitated the evacuation of at least 129 U.S. citizens and 115 lawful
permanent U.S. residents since August 31. Dozens more have also been able to
leave the country via land or charter flights without direct assistance from
the U.S. The U.S. airlifted nearly 130,000 people out of Afghanistan — one of
the largest mass evacuations in America's history — after the Taliban took over
the capital of Kabul in August and before the U.S. military's withdrawal.
^ The US (and many other
countries around the world) continue to do little to nothing to help ALL those
we abandoned in Afghanistan 2 months ago. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/aid-groups-urge-u-help-130020980.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
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