Afghan refugees feel abandoned after Trump executive order halts flights

By , Haq Nawaz Khan and
The Washington Post
January 22, 2025
The fate of tens of thousands of Afghans awaiting resettlement in the U.S. hangs in the balance after Trump suspended the refugee admissions program.

President Donald Trump’s executive order this week suspending the U.S. refugee admissions program has left in limbo tens of thousands of Afghans who were hoping to start new lives in America.

Under President Joe Biden, nearly 200,000 Afghans were resettled in the United States, according to the State Department — most of them evacuated during or soon after the chaotic U.S. military withdrawal in 2021, when the Taliban seized control of the country. Tens of thousands of men and women who had worked for the U.S. military, American diplomats or government-funded organizations were left behind.

Between 40,000 and 60,000 Afghans around the world are actively seeking resettlement in the United States, and thousands had already received U.S. government approval, estimated Shawn VanDiver, the president of AfghanEvac, a volunteer organization formed during the U.S. withdrawal that has helped Afghans flee the country. About 1,700 people were expected to be moved out of Afghanistan over the next four months, he added.

“These are folks who for one reason or another are at risk because of their association with the United States — and they’re hiding because they’re scared,” VanDiver said. They include family members of Afghans serving in the U.S. military, as well as women and minorities who fear persecution under the Taliban.

The U.S. president has broad authority to decide how many refugees are admitted to the country in a given year, and to allocate funding for resettlement. During his first term, Trump dramatically reduced refugee admissions, particularly from Muslim-majority countries. Biden swiftly raised the admissions ceiling when he took office in 2021, but it took years to build up the country’s resettlement capabilities. In the last fiscal year of Biden’s presidency, the United States took in just over 100,000 refugees from around the world.

Trump’s executive order, which suspends the refugee admissions program in its entirety, did not mention specific nationalities, and did not explicitly target Special Immigrant Visas, or SIVs — reserved for Afghans who directly supported the 20-year U.S. war effort, including as military interpreters. VanDiver said he was optimistic that families would continue to arrive under the SIV program, which brought in more than 30,000 Afghans in fiscal 2024.

The State Department declined to comment for this article. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Afghans and their advocates are bracing for the worst. On Wednesday morning, AfghanEvac posted screenshots to X of a State Department letter sent to groups that coordinate refugee resettlement. “All previously scheduled travel of refugees to the United States is being cancelled, and no new travel bookings will be made,” it read in part.

Danilo Zak, the policy director at Church World Service, an official U.S. resettlement agency, told The Washington Post on Wednesday that “flight cancellations, including for refugee minors … began rolling in this morning.”

VanDiver said his phone hasn’t stopped ringing, as those affected try to make sense of what to do next. Many fled to neighboring Pakistan months or years ago and are running out of money. They say they can’t afford another delay.

“This is so disheartening,” said Spesali Zazai, a 52-year-old Afghan woman. She has been stuck in Peshawar, in northwestern Pakistan, for almost three years, waiting for resettlement in the United States with three of her daughters. Poland, another NATO member, took in her fourth daughter.

“Going back is not an option,” she said. “For women, there’s nothing left to live for in Afghanistan.”

The Taliban has imposed increasing restrictions on women since it returned to power, banning them from secondary and university education and limiting their freedom of movement and expression. While the government initially portrayed its education ban as temporary, hopes among women that classes would resume have faded over the past year as authorities introduced draconian measures governing nearly every aspect of public life.

Many Afghan men who were associated with the United States and its allies may also be at risk from the Taliban, human rights observers say, despite the regime’s general amnesty for those who served in the previous, Western-backed government. The United Nations documented over 200 extrajudicial killings of former officials and members of the armed forces after the Taliban takeover in 2021. The Afghan Foreign Ministry rejects those figures, saying that “no military staff of the previous administration has been arrested, detained or tortured because of his activities in the security institutions.”

A key question now will be how the Pakistani government responds to Trump’s executive order. Pakistan has forced about 800,000 Afghans to return to their country since fall 2023. So far, Afghans awaiting resettlement in the United States and other countries have largely been spared, but authorities in Islamabad have indicated repeatedly that they are running out of patience.

A Pakistani Foreign Ministry official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to comment, said the government is still waiting for clarity from Washington.

The suspension of the refugee admission program takes effect Monday. While it does not have a set end date, it is expected to be reviewed after 90 days.

The order leaves room for “case-by-case” exceptions to the suspension, though it is unclear who would qualify. Refugee advocates are calling for much broader exemptions that would apply to applicants under the P-1 and P-2 programs, which include former Afghan officials and journalists.

Adam Bates, a senior supervisory policy counsel at the International Refugee Assistance Project, said Trump’s suspension of the refugee admissions program is “a direct assault on the promises that the U.S. government made for 20-plus years to Afghans.”

Biden vowed in August 2021 that “we will continue to support the Afghan people,” but was criticized by refugee advocates throughout his term for not doing more to hasten the resettlement of America’s Afghan allies. The criticism intensified in 2022 as the administration worked quickly to resettle Ukrainian refugees fleeing the Russian invasion, even as many Afghans were still waiting for their number to be called.

“We had hopes to be able to start over in the U.S., to build a future for our families,” said Homaira Haidari, 28, who has been in Pakistan since early 2023 waiting for relocation to the United States. She found out about Trump’s executive order on social media. “It feels like our dreams are falling apart,” she said.

Haidari, a former journalist and midwifery student, has seen her prospects in Afghanistan wither. Female reporters have become a rare sight under the Taliban, and as of last month, women were banned from pursuing careers as nurses or midwives.

The United States has remained a major contributor of financial aid to Afghanistan, sending money through U.N. agencies and other organizations that allow the funds to bypass authorities in Kabul. But Trump suspended all foreign assistance programs on Monday for 90 days, pending review, and has threatened to permanently cut off funding unless the Taliban returns the billions of dollars in military equipment left behind by U.S. troops.

Jan Egeland, secretary general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, warned that a sustained halt to U.S. assistance would have severe ripple effects in Afghanistan, worsening the country’s economic crisis and probably forcing aid groups to lay off female workers.

“Women and girls in Afghanistan would further suffer, and lives will be lost,” he said.

Shaiq Hussain contributed to this report.

Afghan refugees feel abandoned after Trump executive order halts flights
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Landmine charity’s lifesaving work supported

BBC News
22 Jan 2025
PA Media Someone with their face covered and wearing protective clothing sifts through the parts of an unexploded bomb
The Halo Trust carries out landmine clearance work around the world

The world’s largest land mine clearance charity – the south of Scotland-based Halo Trust – has secured funding to continue its work in Ukraine and Afghanistan.

The UK government has awarded it more than £7m towards its efforts to remove deadly explosives around the world.

International Development Minister Annaliese Dodds visited its headquarters near Thornhill in Dumfries and Galloway to see their demining training in action.

“No one should have to live in fear of being killed or maimed by one wrong step,” she said.

“These deadly devices sow fear and destruction for decades and organisations like the Halo Trust do a vital job in clearing mines.”

In addition to the extension of contracts in Ukraine and Afghanisation, the minister also announced £250,000 to dispose of unsafe ammunition and explosives in Somaliland.

Ms Dodds said the funding should allow the Halo Trust to continue its “life-saving work removing deadly devices from some of the most hazardous parts of the world”.

As part of the visit, she also spoke to female deminers operating in Syria and Ukraine from the trust’s situation room.

She added: “During my visit today I have been given fascinating insights into the challenging conditions under which Halo’s deminers work.

“I was struck by the increasingly important contribution that female deminers are making in a traditionally male-dominated sector.”

UK Government International Development Minister Annaliese Dodds is shown around the Halo Trust landmine clearance charity headquarters by a man with a beard in a blue shirt as they look at metal detectors and other demining equipment
International Development Minister Annaliese Dodds announced the funding during a visit to the Halo Trust

Since its establishment in 1988, the Halo Trust has cleared two million mines and other explosive ordnance – saving an estimated two million lives and giving more than 10 million people safer access to schools, health clinics and farming land.

Ruth Jackson, chief strategy officer at the trust, said: “There can be no genuine recovery from conflict until all deadly unexploded mines and munitions are safely cleared.”

She said the funding would make a “huge difference” to tens of thousands of people at risk from “dangerous levels of explosive contamination”.

“Until the last landmine is out of the ground and the last bomb defused, large numbers of people will continue to live in fear,” she said.

“We remain dedicated to continuing our lifesaving work alongside the Mines Advisory Group and other partners until this is achieved.”

Landmine charity’s lifesaving work supported
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Advocates and family react as Trump cancels Afghan refugee resettlement

Al Jazeera

Afghans who fled their home country after the Taliban’s return to power in 2021 are pleading for the United States to reconsider a decision cancelling all existing refugee resettlement efforts.

On Wednesday, reactions continued to pour in against an executive order Trump had signed two days prior, on his first day in office.

That order called for the suspension of the US Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP), which processes refugees for resettlement in the country, starting on January 27. All applications and arrivals through the programme have likewise been suspended.

But the sudden halt to USRAP has left Afghan refugees — many already approved to enter the US — in limbo, facing instability and the threat of violence.

Mahnoosh Monir, a former medical student and teacher at a language centre in Afghanistan, fled to Pakistan after the Taliban shut down the school where she worked.

Since taking power, the Taliban has severely restricted women’s rights, even banning their ability to speak in public.

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Monir expressed surprise at Trump’s actions in an article published in The Associated Press on Wednesday. She told the news agency women would struggle to “survive” under Taliban rule.

“I didn’t expect this suspension to happen,” Monir said. “A long span of waiting makes us think of very disappointing probabilities, like being sent back to Afghanistan or waiting for a long time in Pakistan as a refugee at risk, which are like nightmares to all of case holders.”

Afghans, some already approved to arrive in the US, are left in limbo after the US president suspends refugee resettlement.

The US ‘owes Afghans a great debt’

Others questioned whether the US was abdicating its responsibility to the Afghans who supported its military presence in the country for two decades.

Thousands of Afghans had worked with US armed forces and the US-backed government during its two-decade-long war in the country. After the collapse of the US-backed government in August 2021, many feared retaliation from the Taliban and hoped to find safe haven in the US.

“President Trump’s decision to cancel the flights of Afghans and other refugees who were cleared and vetted to come to the United States is cruel, ugly and racist,” Arash Azizzada, co-founder of the US-based advocacy organisation Afghans For a Better Tomorrow, told Al Jazeera via text.

“This decision will ensure that Afghans seeking safety could face being targeted, imprisoned, tortured or even worse under a brutal Taliban rule. The United States owes Afghans a great debt, and we will ensure America pays that debt, long after this administration is over.”

Another advocacy group, Afghan USRAP Refugees, published an open letter to Trump and members of the US Congress, calling for action.

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“Many of us risked our lives to support the U.S. mission as interpreters, contractors, human rights defenders, and allies,” the letter read.

Even across the Afghan border in Pakistan, it warned that refugees faced dangerous conditions.

“In Pakistan, the situation is increasingly untenable. Arbitrary arrests, deportations, and insecurity compound our distress.”

A great demand

An estimated 15,000 Afghans are currently waiting in neighbouring Pakistan to be approved for resettlement. Some have waited for years and spent countless hours navigating the complex bureaucracy of the US immigration system.

Others have travelled to South America to make the perilous journey north to the US-Mexico border, so they can seek asylum.

The United Nations has called the situation in Afghanistan “one of the world’s most urgent crises”. It projects more than a half million Afghans will need resettlement in 2025.

According to a report from the US Department of State, more than 160,000 Afghans have arrived in the country since August 2021. Still, advocates had criticised the administration of former President Joe Biden for slow-walking decisions on entry.

Trump, who replaced Biden on Monday, had campaigned on a platform of severely restricting immigration into the US. During his first term, from 2017 to 2021, the Republican leader also implemented a ban on entry for citizens of several Muslim-majority countries, leading critics to dub the policy “the Muslim ban”.

In Monday’s executive order, Trump defended his actions as necessary, depicting the US as overwhelmed with arrivals.

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“The United States lacks the ability to absorb large numbers of migrants, and in particular, refugees, into its communities in a manner that does not compromise the availability of resources for Americans,” the executive order said.

It is not clear when, or if, USRAP will be resumed. Trump called for a report about the programme at the end of 90 days — and at the end of every 90-day period thereafter, until he determines that the “resumption of the USRAP is in the interests of the United States”.

The announcement has caused anxiety among those in the US, including military service members, with family members still in Afghanistan or in refugee camps.

“I’m just thinking about this all day,” an Afghan American soldier with the US Army’s 82nd Airborne Division, who spoke to the Reuters news agency on condition of anonymity.

His sister remains in the Afghan capital of Kabul. “I can’t even do my job properly because this is mentally impacting me.”

Source: Al Jazeera and news agencies
Advocates and family react as Trump cancels Afghan refugee resettlement
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Amir Khan Muttaqi meets UN special envoy in Afghanistan

Khaama Press

The Taliban’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that Amir Khan Muttaqi, the group’s Foreign Minister, met with Roza Otunbayeva, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Afghanistan.

Roza Otunbayeva met with Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi, noting that development aid to Afghanistan has increased compared to humanitarian assistance.

According to a statement from the Taliban’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Wednesday, January 22, the two discussed humanitarian aid and the country’s economic growth during their meeting.

During the meeting, Muttaqi also emphasized the importance of strengthening economic stability in various sectors and assured that Afghanistan will experience rapid economic growth in the near future.

Meanwhile, U.S. President Donald Trump, on his first day in office, halted U.S. financial aid to Afghanistan for 90 days, causing concerns among international organizations.

With millions in Afghanistan relying on humanitarian aid, some international bodies have described Trump’s decision as alarming, underscoring the fragile state of the country’s population.

Afghanistan faces a dire humanitarian crisis, with over 23 million people urgently needing assistance, according to aid organizations. The worsening economic and social conditions have left many families struggling to survive.

Neighboring countries have exacerbated the crisis by forcibly deporting Afghan refugees, leaving thousands displaced and without support. This has led to a significant exodus of Afghan youth, who are fleeing the country in search of safety and stability.

Immediate international action is critical to addressing the humanitarian crisis and preventing further displacement. Aid organizations call for sustained funding and cooperation to meet the urgent needs of millions.

Amir Khan Muttaqi meets UN special envoy in Afghanistan
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Chinese citizen killed by unidentified gunman in Takhar, Afghanistan

Unidentified gunmen killed a Chinese citizen on Tuesday evening in Takhar province, Afghanistan.

Sources reported that unidentified gunmen killed a Chinese citizen on Tuesday evening, January 21, in Khwaja Bahauddin district of Takhar province, Afghanistan. The interpreter and driver accompanying the victim fled the scene and sought refuge at a Taliban checkpoint.

Local Taliban officials confirmed the death of the Chinese citizen, identified as “Li,” according to the spokesperson for the Taliban police command in Takhar.

Mohammad Akbar Haqqan, spokesperson for the Taliban’s security command in Takhar, stated that the victim, along with his interpreter, had traveled without informing Chinese office authorities or security officials. They were attacked by unidentified assailants in the Dasht Qala area of Takhar.

Taliban authorities have launched an investigation into the incident and are interrogating the driver and interpreter, according to intelligence sources. The victim was reportedly involved in mining activities in the region.

The killing of a foreign national highlights the escalating tensions and insecurity in the region, where foreign citizens, including Chinese nationals, have increasingly become targets of violence in both Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The targeting of foreign nationals adds to the instability in the region, complicating diplomatic relations and international investments. The situation underscores the urgent need for enhanced security measures and regional cooperation to prevent further violence.

Chinese citizen killed by unidentified gunman in Takhar, Afghanistan
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WFP: 15 Million Afghans Face Food Insecurity This Winter

The WFP’s communications official added that they are striving to provide humanitarian aid to six million people each month.

The World Food Programme (WFP) said that this winter nearly 15 million people in Afghanistan are facing emergency levels of food insecurity.

The WFP’s communications official added that they are striving to provide humanitarian aid to six million people each month.

Ziauddin Safi, the communications officer for the World Food Program, said: “Thanks to national assistance from the European Union and other partners, the WFP intends to provide emergency food aid to six million people across the country every month this winter.”

Meanwhile, 56-year-old Jumma Gul, who complains about poverty and lack of work, said that because his children are young, he is forced to work with his handcart.

Jumma Gul said: “There is no work. The 100 afghani I earn daily – should I buy bread, oil, or wood first? My sons are still young.”

However, some economic experts are calling for humanitarian aid to be invested in Afghanistan’s development projects. According to them, such an initiative could create job opportunities for the people.

Abdul Naseer Rishtia, an economic affairs expert, said: “If the world and international organizations are helping Afghanistan, it would be better if they provide economic aid, initiate economic projects that create a stable income for people so they can change their lives. Otherwise, this humanitarian aid is temporary and has no lasting economic impact.”

The WFP has also stated that due to the financial crisis, it has reduced its activities in Afghanistan. However, the recent aid from its partners will be allocated to providing food and treating malnutrition among families, pregnant and breastfeeding mothers, and young children.

WFP: 15 Million Afghans Face Food Insecurity This Winter
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Islamic Emirate: ‘Terrorists’ Placed in Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

According to this information, these forces have been recruited from several Asian and European countries.

The Islamic Emirate’s Security & Clearance Commission of the Ministry of Defence has stated that, based on credible information, newly recruited forces are being transferred via Karachi and Islamabad airports to centers in Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s tribal areas. Their objective is to carry out attacks in regional and global countries, particularly Afghanistan.

According to this information, these forces have been recruited from several Asian and European countries.

The commission, in its annual achievements report, also stated that the attacks carried out in Afghanistan over the past year were planned abroad and executed by foreign nationals, especially citizens of Tajikistan and Pakistan.

Meanwhile, the commission’s spokesperson, Sediqullah Nusrat, has called on the UN Security Council and the international community to obtain information about Afghanistan’s security situation from the relevant institutions of the caretaker government.

Nusrat said: “The Islamic Emirate has repeatedly clarified that it will not allow Afghanistan’s territory to be used against other countries and calls on other nations not to provide shelter to malicious elements.”

He further said: “The Islamic Emirate, based on its religious responsibility, has sincerely fought against drug trafficking, and the international community and regional countries should obtain information in this regard by contacting the relevant institutions of the Islamic Emirate.”

The Security & Clearance Commission of the Ministry of Defence has also highlighted the reduction of criminal activities, strengthening border security, professionalization of security forces, and combating drug trafficking as its key achievements.

The commission has urged neighboring countries to prevent drug smuggling into Afghanistan and make greater efforts in combating drugs.

“Unless Pakistan decides not to be a troublesome neighbor for us, our policies will not progress. This is not the first Afghan government that Pakistan has had issues with,” Obaidullah Baheer, a political analyst, told TOLOnews.

Earlier, the Counter-Narcotics Department of the Ministry of Interior Affairs had also urged neighboring countries to prevent drug trafficking into Afghanistan.

Islamic Emirate: ‘Terrorists’ Placed in Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
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Trump’s shadow looms over Dollar surge; one Dollar hits 75 Afghanis

On the first day of Donald Trump’s presidency, the exchange rate for one US dollar in the markets of Kabul was 75 Afghanis.

Currency exchangers stated today (Tuesday, January 21) that the buying rate for one US dollar is 75 Afghanis, while the selling rate is 75.10 Afghanis in the capital’s markets.

The value of the US dollar has increased, while the Central Bank of Afghanistan, in an effort to stabilize the Afghan currency, auctioned 18 million US dollars on Sunday to maintain the value of the Afghani.

It is noteworthy that as the dollar rate increases in the country, the prices of food items also rise. However, some citizens are urging the authorities to pay more attention to controlling these prices.

This comes at a time when newly elected US President Donald Trump recently signed an executive order to temporarily suspend all US foreign aid programs for 90 days. It is said that this suspension is to review how these programs align with his political objectives.

Meanwhile, after the establishment of the Taliban administration, the US has frozen about seven billion dollars of Afghanistan’s Central Bank assets. The US transferred 3.5 billion dollars to an escrow account in Switzerland and has kept the remaining 3.5 billion dollars frozen.

The spokesperson for the Taliban regime has repeatedly stated that the continued freezing of Afghanistan’s assets is “against all principles and an unjust action.”

The fluctuations in the dollar’s value against the Afghani have always been a challenge for the people, affecting their daily lives and the cost of living.

In light of these financial issues, many are calling for urgent measures to stabilize the currency and address the economic challenges facing the country. The international community’s role in supporting Afghanistan’s economic stability will likely continue to be a significant topic of discussion in the coming months.

Trump’s shadow looms over Dollar surge; one Dollar hits 75 Afghanis
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Trump’s Suspension of Refugee Admissions Puts Afghans at Risk, Advocate Says

The order “risks abandoning thousands of Afghan wartime allies” who worked with Americans before the Taliban takeover, the head of a resettlement group said.

An executive order signed by President Trump on Monday that suspends refugee admissions to the United States puts at risk thousands of citizens of Afghanistan who helped the American mission during the war there, the president of a California-based resettlement group said.

The order would affect not only scores of Afghans who are now in hiding from the Taliban’s repressive rule, but also family members of active-duty U.S. troops, said Shawn VanDiver, the president of AfghanEvac, a coalition of more than 250 organizations helping to resettle Afghans who worked with the Americans before the U.S. withdrawal in 2021.

The order amounts to “another broken promise” by the United States, Mr. VanDiver said by email. It “risks abandoning thousands of Afghan wartime allies who stood alongside U.S. service members during two decades of conflict,” he added.

Mr. Trump’s order, titled “Realigning the United States Refugee Admissions Program,” is set to take effect next Monday. It does not specify when the suspension will end, saying that it will continue “until such time as the further entry into the United States of refugees aligns with the interests of the United States.”

Refugee programs have historically been a point of pride in the United States, reflecting its ambition to be seen as a leader on human rights. The president has usually made an annual determination about how many refugees to let into the country in any given year.

After the U.S. military’s chaotic retreat from Afghanistan as the Taliban took power, the Biden administration launched Operation Allies Welcome, allowing 76,000 evacuated Afghans to enter the United States for humanitarian reasons, according to the Washington-based Migration Policy Institute.

As of 2023, more than 90,000 Afghans had settled in the United States, according to statistics cited by Mustafa Babak, an Emerson Collective fellow who is an advocacy and resettlement expert. But U.S. refugee agencies had been bracing for the admissions program to be gutted since Mr. Trump won the November election.

During his first term as president, Mr. Trump signed an executive order barring people from six Muslim-majority countries from entering the country. He slashed the annual U.S. refugee cap; in 2020, the final full year of his term, the United States admitted a record low number of refugees, about 11,000. The move left thousands of refugees stranded in camps in Kenya, Tanzania and Jordan.

Joseph R. Biden Jr. revived the program after becoming president in 2021. In the fiscal year that ended on Sept. 30, 2024, about 100,000 refugees arrived in the United States, the most in nearly three decades, records show.

The suspension of refugee admissions was one of a blizzard of executive orders signed by Mr. Trump within hours of his swearing-in on Monday. Other orders cracked down on illegal immigration and ended the U.S. program that allowed migrants from Cuba, Venezuela, Haiti and Nicaragua to enter the United States for up to two years if they had a financial sponsor and passed security checks.

The refugee order states, “Over the last four years, the United States has been inundated with record levels of migration, including through the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP). Cities and small towns alike, from Charleroi, Pennsylvania, and Springfield, Ohio, to Whitewater, Wisconsin, have seen significant influxes of migrants. Even major urban centers such as New York City, Chicago, and Denver have sought federal aid to manage the burden of new arrivals.”

But Mr. VanDiver said surveys had shown strong support among the American public for the continued relocation and resettlement of Afghan allies.

He noted that people vetted under the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program entered the country “only after receiving a government or U.S. run nonprofit referral and after undergoing extensive service verification, background checks, medical screening and rigorous security vetting.”

Now, he said, Mr. Trump’s executive action will plunge thousands of Afghan refugees into limbo by freezing all cases where they stand and preventing Afghans from boarding flights to the United States. He said another executive order by Mr. Trump — about protecting the country from “foreign terrorists and other national security and public safety threats” — had provisions that could further affect Afghan nationals seeking refuge in the United States.

Mr. VanDiver said his coalition, which works to secure special visas for Afghans who assisted the U.S. mission, had sent a letter signed by more than 700 people, including veterans and civilians who worked in Afghanistan, “urging the administration to exempt Afghan allies from this pause.”

Among those who could be shut out are “family members of active duty DoD service members and partner forces who trained, fought and died alongside U.S. troops,” Mr. VanDiver said, referring to the Department of Defense.

“Failing to protect our Afghan allies sends a dangerous message to the world: that U.S. commitments are conditional and temporary,” he said. “This decision undermines global trust in our leadership and jeopardizes future alliances.”

Yonette Joseph is a senior editor based in Mexico City.

Trump’s Suspension of Refugee Admissions Puts Afghans at Risk, Advocate Says
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White House cheers release of two Americans freed in a swap with Taliban brokered by Biden, Qatar

By ZEKE MILLERJON GAMBRELL and AAMER MADHANI\

WASHINGTON (AP) — A prisoner swap between the United States and Afghanistan’s Taliban freed two Americans in exchange for a Taliban figure imprisoned for life in California on drug trafficking and terrorism charges, officials said Tuesday.

The deal to release two Americans, Ryan Corbett and William McKenty, was brokered by Joe Biden ‘s administration before he left office Monday, according to a Trump administration official who was not authorized to comment publicly and requested anonymity.

The Taliban’s Foreign Ministry in Kabul said the two U.S. citizens had been exchanged for Khan Mohammed, who was sentenced to two life terms in 2008.

Biden, who oversaw the chaotic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021, on Monday handed power to President Donald Trump. The Taliban praised the swap as a step toward the “normalization” of ties between the U.S. and Afghanistan.

That is likely a tall order, as most countries still don’t recognize the Taliban’s rule and two other Americans are believed held. The Trump White House cheered the release and thanked Qatar for its assistance with the deal while pressing the Taliban to free other Americans.

“The Trump Administration will continue to demand the release of all Americans held by the Taliban, especially in light of the billions of dollars in U.S. aid they’ve received in recent years,” White House National Security Council spokesperson Brian Hughes said in a statement.

U.S., Taliban and Qatar involved in the swap

Corbett, who had lived in Afghanistan with his family when the U.S.-backed government collapsed in 2021, was detained by the Taliban in August 2022 on a business trip.

“Our hearts are filled with overwhelming gratitude and praise to God for sustaining Ryan’s life and bringing him back home after what has been the most challenging and uncertain 894 days of our lives,” the family’s statement said. They thanked both Trump and Biden.

Corbett’s family also praised Qatari officials “for their vital role in facilitating Ryan’s release, and for their visits to Ryan as the United States’ Protecting Power in Afghanistan.” Qatar has hosted negotiations between the U.S. and the Taliban over the years.

A Qatar Foreign Ministry statement said those who were traded passed through Doha and that it hopes the deal “would pave the way for achieving further understandings” to resolve disputes peacefully.

It was unclear what McKenty was doing in Afghanistan.

Biden administration’s effort to get a deal

Before Biden left office, his administration had been trying to work out a deal to free Corbett, McKenty as well as George Glezmann and Mahmood Habibi, in exchange for Muhammad Rahim, one of the remaining detainees at the military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

The Taliban had rejected multiple proposals that also would have included Glezmann and Habibi before accepting the deal to release Corbett and McKenty late last week following negotiations in Qatar, according to a former senior Biden administration official who was not authorized to comment publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The official added that Biden officials found in past negotiations for American detainees in Russia that “one deal can make it easier to get future ones” and that the Trump administration should continue to push the Taliban for Glezmann and Habibi.

Russia had rejected proposals to include American Paul Whelan in separate prisoner swaps that freed Americans Trevor Reed and Britney Griner before ultimately including Whelan in a 24-person deal that included Wall Street Journalist Evan Gershkovich and others.

Glezmann, an airline mechanic from Atlanta, was taken by the Taliban’s intelligence services in December 2022 while traveling through the country. Habibi, an Afghan-American businessman who worked as a contractor for a Kabul-based telecommunications company, also went missing in 2022. The Taliban have denied they have Habibi.

Habibi’s family welcomed the exchange and said they were confident the Trump administration would make a “greater effort” to free him, expressing their frustration with the Biden team.

“We know they have evidence my brother is alive and in Taliban hands and it could have been influential in encouraging the Taliban to admit they have him,” Habibi’s brother Ahmed said in a statement shared by the nonprofit Global Reach.

Biden officials “refused to use” the evidence, he claimed. “We know Trump is about results and we have faith he will use every tool available to get Mahmood home.”

The trade for Corbett and McKenty was originally supposed to take place Sunday night but had to be delayed until Tuesday because of logistical delays, including bad weather, the former Biden administration official said.

Taliban prisoner first convicted of narco-terrorism

Mohammed, 55, was a prisoner in California after his 2008 conviction. The Bureau of Prisons early Tuesday listed Mohammed as not being in their custody.

Hafiz Zia Ahmad Takal, a Taliban Foreign Ministry deputy spokesperson, said Mohammed had arrived in Afghanistan and was with his family. Photos released by the Taliban showed him being welcomed back in his home province of Nangarhar, in the country’s east, with multicolored garlands.

Mohammed told Taliban-controlled media he had spent time behind bars in Bagram and in Washington.

“It’s a joy seeing your family and coming to your homeland. The greatest joy is to come and join your Muslim brothers,” he said.

He was detained on the battlefield in Nangarhar and later taken to the U.S. A federal jury convicted him on charges of securing heroin and opium that he knew were bound for the United States and, in doing so, assisting terrorism activity.

The Justice Department at the time referred to Mohammed as “a violent jihadist and narcotics trafficker” who “sought to kill U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan using rockets.” He was the first person to be convicted on U.S. narco-terrorism laws.

Ahmed Rashid, the author of several books about Afghanistan and the Taliban, described Mohammed as the “biggest drugs smuggler the U.S. had to deal with and key funder of the Taliban.”

Taliban try to gain international recognition

The Taliban called the exchange the result of “long and fruitful negotiations” with the U.S. and said it was a good example of solving problems through dialogue.

“The Islamic Emirate looks positively at the actions of the United States of America that help the normalization and development of relations between the two countries,” it said.

The Taliban have been trying to make inroads in being recognized, in part to escape the economic tailspin caused by their takeover. Billions in international funds were frozen, and tens of thousands of highly skilled Afghans fled the country and took their money with them.

However, some nations have welcomed Taliban officials, like the United Arab Emirates, home to Abu Dhabi and Dubai. On Tuesday, Emirati leader Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan again welcomed Taliban Interior Minister Sirajuddin Haqqani, who also heads the Haqqani network, a powerful force within the group blamed for some of the bloodiest attacks against Afghanistan’s former Western-backed government.

Haqqani is still wanted by the U.S. on a bounty of up to $10 million over his involvement in an attack that killed an American citizen and other assaults. The meeting came even as the UAE maintains a close relationship with the U.S.

Gambrell reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Najib Jobain in Doha, Qatar, and Eric Tucker in Washington contributed to this report.

 

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