From VOA:
“Afghan Students in US Face
Uncertain Future”
(“The return of Taliban rule in
Afghanistan has fundamentally altered my personal and professional trajectory
and took all my hopes and plans and aspirations for the future,” says Maryam
Rayed, a Fulbright scholarship recipient.)
Afghan students studying at
universities in the U.S. through scholarship programs face a more uncertain
future since the Taliban took over and many say they cannot return to their
home country because of concerns for their safety. More than 100 Afghan students
came to the United States through the Fulbright program last academic year,
some of them only days before the Taliban took power in Afghanistan and the
U.S. embassy in Kabul was abruptly shut. Under the terms of the Fulbright
scholarship program, recipients are required to return to their home countries
at the end of their academic programs.
Several Afghan students
interviewed by VOA said their status as students studying abroad in America
endangers their lives under a Taliban regime in Afghanistan. “I have come to
terms with the reality that is going back to my beloved Afghanistan and working
there is no longer possible,” said Maryam Rayed who left Afghanistan last
August to pursue a master's degree in democracy and governance at Georgetown
University in Washington. The U.S. government has evacuated tens of thousands
of Afghans who had worked for or had affiliation with the U.S. in Afghanistan
out of fear that the Taliban will target them.
Immediately after seizing power on Aug. 15 last year, the Taliban announced a general amnesty for all Afghans who worked for the previous Afghan government and for the U.S. and its allies in Afghanistan. Human rights groups, however, accuse the Taliban of targeting and killing Afghans who had ties to the U.S. and to the former Afghan government. Before coming to the U.S. to study international affairs at the State University of New York in Albany, Ahmad Raheb Radfar worked as a foreign service officer at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of what was until August 2021 the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan. “My plan was to return to Afghanistan and resume my work at the ministry upon the completion of my program. But now, given the current situation of Afghanistan, I cannot do that,” Radfar told VOA.
Hopes lost
(Afghan women chant and hold
signs of protest, in Kabul, Dec. 27, 2021. Around 20 members of Afghanistan
Women's Political Participation Network protested in a closed area in Kabul
while holding signs asking the Taliban for equality.)
Since 2003, more than 950 Afghans
have received Fulbright scholarships, mostly 2-year master's degree programs.
Many others earned sponsored educational opportunities at undergraduate and
graduate levels at various U.S. academic institutions. The expectation was that
these highly educated Afghans would contribute to the building of a stable
democratic system in Afghanistan. “The return of Taliban rule in Afghanistan
has fundamentally altered my personal and professional trajectory and took all
my hopes and plans and aspirations for the future,” said Rayed, adding that she
wanted to serve as a governance specialist in Afghanistan after her U.S.
education.
Under the Taliban, Afghan women
have been effectively fired from all government jobs except those working in
the health and education sectors. The Taliban have institutionalized
large-scale and systematic discriminatory policies which “constitute a
collective punishment of women and girls,” a group of three dozen
U.N.-appointed experts warned last week. “Taliban deprive women of livelihoods
and identity,” Human Rights Watch said in a joint report with the Human Rights
Institute at San Jose State University on Jan. 17. One former Fulbright
scholar, who did not want to be named out of fear of Taliban reprisal, said she
was fired from a prominent job at the Afghan Ministry of Agriculture,
Irrigation and Livestock because of her gender. “My education, work
experiences, skills and dedication to my country don’t matter for the Taliban.
They’re only obsessed with my gender,” she said. Respect for women’s rights,
including the right to education and work, is a major condition set forth by
the U.S. and many other countries for a possible recognition of the Taliban’s
self-declared Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan. Taliban officials have said the
regime is working to facilitate an “Islamic environment” for Afghan girls and
women to return to schools and universities but have not committed to giving
any representation to women in the government. The Taliban’s leadership,
cabinet and senior government posts are entirely occupied by men.
Students in limbo The U.S.
government has offered special immigration and entry procedures to help Afghans
settle in the U.S., including a humanitarian parole program which allows
individuals to enter the U.S. without travel documents. Spokespeople at the
Department of State and the Institute of International Education, which
administers the Fulbright program, could not confirm to VOA whether there was a
plan to waive the Fulbright requirement for the Afghan students to return to
their home country after their studies are completed. “We have been in
touch with the [Fulbright] program administrators and have shared our concerns
with them, but so far, they have not offered any assurance about our future,”
said Radfar. Two other students echoed similar concerns and added they
were looking for an extension to their studies, primarily through PhD
scholarships, in order to remain in the U.S. “This ambiguity has
affected our academic performance negatively and has taken any motivation from
us,” said Rayed. “We desperately need some clarity on what our future
will be. This limbo status is hurting us,” said another student who did not
want her name to be mentioned.
While the Afghan Fulbright
scholars who made it to the U.S. in the past two years complain about their
uncertain future, those selected for the 2022 scholarships are stuck in
Afghanistan with no guarantees they will start their classes in the U.S. in the
coming fall. There is no U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan to process visas, and
travel from the country is extremely restricted and complicated. "We are
reviewing the significant safety, logistical, and programmatic constraints
which must be overcome to successfully implement the 2022-23 Fulbright Program.
We are committed to remaining in communication with the semi-finalist group
about the status of the program, understanding they must pursue the choices
that make the most sense for themselves and their families,” a State Department
of official told VOA. It’s also unclear whether the Fulbright program will
continue for Afghan students in the future because of the broken relations
between the U.S. and Afghanistan’s de-facto Taliban rulers. Until the U.S. and
Taliban figure out what kind of relations, if any, they will have in the
future, everything remains shrouded in uncertainty for Afghans who have studied
or aspire to study in the U.S. “I cannot foresee anything right now and like
most Afghans, I am facing an uncertain future,” said 28-year-old Radfar.
^ Any Afghan who is vetted by the
US Government (like Fulbright Scholarship Winners are) should be allowed to
stay in the United States until the Taliban are removed from power in Afghanistan.
^
https://www.voanews.com/a/headline-afghan-students-in-the-us-face-uncertain-future/6407533.html
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