Kabul Facing Water Shortages: AUWSSC

The AUSWWC said that their operations have decreased at least by 40 percent due to lack of sufficient water.

The Afghanistan Urban Water Supply and Sewage Corporation (AUWSSC) said that Kabul is facing an extreme decrease in groundwater.  

The AUSWWC said that their operations have decreased at least by 40 percent due to lack of sufficient water.

“Our services have decreased in areas where we had 24/7 services, and also our services decreased in the areas where we were providing services one day after another,” said Sardar Wali Malikzai, an official at the AUWSSC.

The Ministry of Energy and Water said that it will transfer water from Panjshir to Kabul. Speaking at a press conference, the acting Minister of MoEW, Abdul Latif Mansour, said that the project to transfer water from Panjshir to Kabul will cost $30 million.

“We will start a water pipeline project from Panjshir to Kabul. Second, here is a water dam named Shatot which has an important role in providing water for the citizens,” he said.

Meanwhile, the people who are digging wells said that the water levels mainly dropped in the Khairkhana, Qala-e-Zaman Khan and Karta-e-Naw areas of capital Kabul.

“There are a lot of areas where the level of water has dropped by 30 to 50 meters,” said Mohammad Omar, who works in the well-digging industry.

“Water levels have dropped all over Afghanistan. When we work in some areas in Kabul, the level of water has dropped in every area,” said Hakim Jan, who works digging wells.

According to environmental analysts, lack of water-supplying networks and inappropriate use of groundwater are the main reason for the drop of water levels in the capital city of Kabul.

Kabul Facing Water Shortages: AUWSSC
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Intl Favors Not Welcome if ‘Against Islam’: Hanafi

He said that after the Islamic Emirate swept into power, the women are observing hijab “100 percent.”

Acting Minister of Vice and Virtue, Khalid Hanafi, while visiting Ghazni decried sanctions and said the Islamic Emirate is ready for engagement with the international community, but its offers, if they are against Islam, are not acceptable.

“We just follow Allah, prophet Mohammad, the Caliph of Rashidun and Companions in implementation of our law. We don’t accept anything from anyone which is against Islam,” said Mawlawi Mohammad Khalid Hanafi, minister of Vice and Virtue.

The provincial governor, Mowlawi Mohammad Ishaq Akhundzada, called on the forces of the Islamic Emirate to respect the people.

“Those who stand in the checkpoints, or are in a district office or another department, they should address the problems of the people,” he said.

Hanafi also called on government employees to adjust their appearance based on Sharia.

“All employees that are in the provinces, districts and ministries should make their appearances according to Islamic values,” Hanafi said.

He said that after the Islamic Emirate swept into power, the women are observing hijab “100 percent.”

Intl Favors Not Welcome if ‘Against Islam’: Hanafi
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EU Envoy: ‘Tremendous Consensus’ on ‘Non-Recognition’

Brandt, at a meeting in the European Parliament, called attention to the increase in hunger and the bad economic situation in Afghanistan.

Andreas von Brandt, Ambassador of the European Union for Afghanistan, said that the broad consensus of the international community is that the Islamic Emirate should not be recognized.

Brandt, at a meeting in the European Parliament, called attention to the increase in hunger and the bad economic situation in Afghanistan.

According to Brandr, the world is trying to provide humanitarian assistance to the people of Afghanistan, not to the current government.

“We have a very cautious approach…and I think …if there are a few good things at the moment it is, that there is the tremendous consensus on the non-recognition in the entire Western world and I actually don’t see that changing in the near future,” he said.

Meanwhile, Emomali Rahmon, President of Tajikistan, on Thursday at the meeting of the heads of Central Asian states in Kyrgyzstan said that the Islamic Emirate has acted contrary to what they pledged in terms of forming an inclusive government.

But Kabul has emphasized it had good relations with all countries, especially neighboring countries.

“If the people’s demand to form an inclusive government is not taken into consideration, the situation will not only worsen, but the government won’t be recognized by the international community,” said Sayed Sajad Sajadi, international relations expert.

“The international community and the people of Afghanistan want the current government to include diverse layers of educated youth and representatives from different ethnic groups,” said Ahmad Monib Rasa, political analyst.

The United States and Russia have previously stated that it is still too early to decide whether to recognize the Islamic Emirate until it meets the conditions of the international community.

EU Envoy: ‘Tremendous Consensus’ on ‘Non-Recognition’
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UN slams killings, rights abuses under Afghanistan’s Taliban

By RAHIM FAIEZ

Associated Press
July 20, 2022

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Hundreds of people have been killed in Afghanistan since the Taliban overran the country nearly a year ago, even though security on the whole has improved since then, the United Nations said in a report Wednesday.

The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan also highlighted the poor situation of women and girls since the Taliban takeover and how they have been stripped of many of their human rights under Afghanistan’s current rulers.

“It is beyond time for all Afghans to be able to live in peace and rebuild their lives after 20 years of armed conflict. Our monitoring reveals that despite the improved security situation since 15 August, the people of Afghanistan, in particular women and girls, are deprived of the full enjoyment of their human rights,” said Markus Potzel, deputy special representative of the Secretary-General for Afghanistan.

The report said as many as 700 people have been killed and 1,400 wounded since mid-August 2021, when the Taliban overran the Afghan capital of Kabul as the United States and NATO were in the final weeks of their withdrawal from the country.

The majority of those casualties were linked to attacks by the Islamic State group’s affiliate in the country, a bitter rival of the Taliban which has targeted ethnic and religious minority communities in places where they go to school, worship and go about their daily lives.

Afghanistan has seen persistent bombings and other attacks on civilians, often targeting the mainly Shiite Muslim ethnic Hazara minority. Most of the attacks have been claimed by the Islamic State group’s affiliate in the country.

The report added that the Taliban have made clear their position on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly, freedom of expression and freedom of opinion.

They have limited dissent by cracking down on protests and curbing media freedoms, including by arbitrarily arresting journalists, protestors and civil society activists and issuing restrictions on media outlets.

The report catalogued human rights violations affecting 173 journalists and media workers, 163 of which were attributed to the de facto authorities. Among these were 122 instances of arbitrary arrest and detention, 58 instances of ill-treatment, 33 instances of threats and intimidation and 12 instances of incommunicado detention.

Six journalists were also killed since August, 2021, including five by self-identified Islamic State affiliates and one by unknown perpetrators.

The right to the freedoms of peaceful assembly, expression and opinion are “necessary for the development and progression of a nation,” said Fiona Frazer, the U.N.’s human rights representative in Afghanistan.

“They allow meaningful debate to flourish, also benefiting those who govern by allowing them to better understand the issues and problems facing the population,” she added.

The U.N. also said an amnesty for former government officials the Taliban announced last year has not been consistently upheld. Frazer said the U.N. recorded 160 extrajudicial killings and 178 arrests of former government and military officials.

The report said human rights violations must be investigated by the authorities, perpetrators held accountable, and incidents should be prevented from reoccurring in the future.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid called the U.N. report “baseless and propaganda” and its findings “not true.”

Arbitrary arrests and killings are not allowed in the country and if anyone commits such crimes, they will be considered guilty and face legal action, he added.

After their takeover last year, the Taliban quickly started enforcing a sharply tougher line, harking back to similar radical measures when the Taliban last ruled the country, from 1996 to 2001.

They issued edicts requiring women to cover their faces except for their eyes in public, including women presenters on TV, and banned girls from attending school past the sixth grade.

The U.N. report added that the erosion of women’s rights has been one of the most notable aspects of the de facto administration to date. Since August, women and girls have progressively had their rights to fully participate in education, the workplace and other aspects of public and daily life restricted and in many cases completely taken away.

“The education and participation of women and girls in public life is fundamental to any modern society. The relegation of women and girls to the home denies Afghanistan the benefit of the significant contributions they have to offer. Education for all is not only a basic human right, it is the key to progress and development of a nation,” said Potzel, the U.N. envoy.

During the previous Taliban rule in Afghanistan, they subjected women to overwhelming restrictions, banning them from education and participation in public life and requiring them to wear the all-encompassing burqa.

UN slams killings, rights abuses under Afghanistan’s Taliban
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US Includes Afghanistan on Human Trafficking List

The US State Department added that it is trying to arrest human traffickers and prevent crimes related to human trafficking.

The US State Department in its annual report which was published on Monday, included Afghanistan on the list of countries engaged in a “policy or pattern” of human trafficking and forced labor or whose security forces or government-backed armed groups recruit or use child soldiers.

According to the report, the current government of Afghanistan did not make any efforts to prevent trafficking in Afghanistan.

“After August 15, the Taliban did not investigate, prosecute, or convict any traffickers, nor did it identify or protect any trafficking victims or make any efforts to prevent trafficking. The Taliban shut down shelters and protective services for victims of crime, including trafficking victims— leaving vulnerable populations without support,” the report reads.

But the Islamic Emirate denies claims made in the report, saying that Afghanistan is a secure place for all Afghans.

“The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan has prevented all illegal actions such as human trafficking and it has taken decisive measures against it,” said Bilal Karimi, deputy spokesman of the Islamic Emirate.

In addition to Afghanistan, the new state-sponsors section listed Russia, Burma, Cuba, Iran, North Korea, and five other countries with a “documented ‘policy or pattern’ of human trafficking,” forced labor in government-affiliated sectors, sexual slavery in government camps or that employ or recruit child soldiers.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that currently there are nearly 25 million trafficking victims worldwide.

“The scale of this problem is vast. There are nearly 25 million people currently victims of trafficking. 25 million people. The United States is committed to fighting it because trafficking destabilizes societies, it undermines economies, it harms workers, it enriches those who exploit them, it undercuts legitimate business, and most fundamentally, because it is so profoundly wrong,” he said.

Meanwhile, legal experts believe that this report may have bad effects on Afghanistan.

“Human trafficking and forced labor are rejected and do not have any legal justification,” said Rohullah Sahkhizada, legal expert.

The US State Department added that it is trying to arrest human traffickers and prevent crimes related to human trafficking.

US Includes Afghanistan on Human Trafficking List
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Potzel: Participation of Women, Girls ‘Fundamental’

UNAMA Chief of Human Rights Fiona Frazer read from the report, which stated that education is the key to progress and development of a nation.

Markus Potzel, UNAMA deputy head, at a press conference held for the human rights report released on Wednesday, expressed concern over the closure of girls’ schools and said that the education and participation of women and girls in public life is fundamental to modern society.

“Girls’ education is one issue on which UNAMA has made its views clear to the de facto authorities: participation of women and girls in all areas of society is fundamental to the development and progression of Afghanistan as a country. Relegating women and girls to their homes, depriving them of their basic human rights, deprives Afghanistan of the significant contributions they have to offer,” Potzel said.

UNAMA Chief of Human Rights Fiona Frazer read from the report, which stated that education is the key to progress and development of a nation.

“The education and participation of women and girls in public life is fundamental to any modern society. The relegation of women and girls to the home denies Afghanistan the benefit of the significant contributions they have to offer. Education for all is not only a basic human right, it is the key to progress and development of a nation,” the report reads.

Potzel, the UNAMA deputy head, added that although security has been improved since August last year, Afghan people, especially women and girls, are deprived of their human rights.

“It is beyond time for all Afghans to be able to live in peace and rebuild their lives after 20 years of armed conflict. Our monitoring reveals that despite the improved security situation since 15 August, the people of Afghanistan, in particular women and girls, are deprived of the full enjoyment of their human rights,” said Potzel.

“We ask the Islamic Emirate to open girls’ schools so that girls do not become the victims of politics,” Zarghona Ibrahimi, a student told TOLOnews.

UNAMA’s report highlights specific concerns over the Ministry of Vice and Virtue and the General Directorate of Intelligence, saying that these two institutions have restricted the fundamental freedoms of Afghans.

“Many of the directives issued by the de facto Ministry of Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice limit the human rights and freedoms of Afghans, in particular women and girls. Although such directives are said to be recommendatory in nature, at times members of the de facto authorities have taken a harsh stance on their implementation, including carrying out physical punishments for alleged infringements of their directives,” UNAMA’s report reads.

Women’s rights campaigner Munisa Mobariz stated: “If they really believe in the concepts of human rights and the role of women, and that the problem of Afghan women is a sensitive and important matter for them, they should have a practical action in this regard.”

While the closing of girls’ schools above sixth grade has provoked a wide range of criticism, the deputy spokesman of the Islamic Emirate said the decision is related to the leader of the Islamic Emirate.

“The statement which has been announced by the Ministry of Education and the leadership of the Islamic Emirate, there is a clear explanation about this issue, and everyone should be satisfied with it,” said Bilal Karimi, deputy spokesman of the Islamic Emirate.

309 days have passed since girls’ schools beyond the sixth grade have been closed, but the leader of the Islamic Emirate has not mentioned the reopening of girls’ schools in his meetings and statements.

Potzel: Participation of Women, Girls ‘Fundamental’
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UNAMA Releases Human Rights Report on Past 10 Months

Islamic Emirate spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid, in reaction to the UNAMA report on the human rights situation in Afghanistan

The UN Assistant Mission in Afghanistan on Wednesday released its findings on the human rights situation in Afghanistan since the August 15 collapse of the previous government.

The report highlights the human rights situation between 15 August 2021 – 15 June 2022. 

Speaking to reporters in Kabul, UN deputy special envoy for Afghanistan Markus Potzel said that “the education and participation of women and girls in public life is fundamental to any modern society,” and the “relegation of women and girls to the home denies Afghanistan the benefit of the significant contributions they have to offer.”

While reading from the report, UNAMA Chief of Human Rights Fiona Frazer said that the “rights to freedom of peaceful assembly, freedom of expression and freedom of opinion are not only fundamental freedoms, they are necessary for the development and progression of a nation.”

“They allow meaningful debate to flourish, also benefiting those who govern by allowing them to better understand the issues and problems facing the population,” she added.

UNAMA highlighted its key findings for the period 15 August 2021 – 15 June 2022:

  • “2106 civilian casualties (700 killed, 1406 wounded) predominantly caused by improvised explosive device (IED) attacks attributed to ISIL-KP and unexploded ordnance (UXO).”
  • “160 extrajudicial killings, 178 arbitrary arrests and detentions, 23 instances of incommunicado detention and 56 instances of torture and ill-treatment of former ANDSF and government officials carried out by the de facto authorities.”
  • “59 extrajudicial killings, 22 arbitrary arrests and detentions and 7 incidents of torture and ill-treatment by the de facto authorities of individuals accused of affiliation with self-identified “Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant – Khorasan Province.”
  • “18 extrajudicial killings, 54 instances of torture and ill-treatment and 113 instances of arbitrary arrest and detention and 23 cases of incommunicado detention of individuals accused of affiliation with self-identified ‘National Resistance Front.'”
  • “217 instances of cruel, inhuman and degrading punishments carried out by the de facto authorities since 15 August 2021.”
  • “118 instances of excessive use of force by the de facto authorities between 15 August 2021 and 15 June 2022.
  • “Human rights violations affecting 173 journalists and media workers, 163 of which were attributed to the de facto authorities. Among these were 122 instances of arbitrary arrest and detention, 58 instances of ill-treatment, 33 instances of threats and intimidation and 12 instances of incommunicado detention. Six journalists were also killed during the period (five by self-identified Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant – Khorasan Province, one by unknown perpetrators).
  • “Human rights violations affecting 65 human rights defenders, 64 of which were attributed to the de facto authorities. Among these were 47 arbitrary arrests, 17 cases of incommunicado detention, 10 cases of ill-treatment and 17 cases of threats and intimidation.”

Islamic Emirate spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid, in reaction to the UNAMA report on the human rights situation in Afghanistan, said the report is “inaccurate” and there are no extrajudicial killings and if anyone commits them they will be punished based on Sharia. Mujahid called the findings of the report in this regard “propaganda.”

Regarding the figures above, the report noted: “Since one individual may have suffered more than one violation (e.g., one person may have been arbitrarily arrested, held incommunicado, tortured and/or threatened), the number of violations is higher than the number of individuals affected.”

UNAMA Releases Human Rights Report on Past 10 Months
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Facing Poverty, Afghan Youth Return to Iran

However, the Islamic Emirate said it is trying to address Afghan migrants’ challenges in Iran through diplomatic dialogue.

Some Afghan youth said that although they have been forcibly deported from Iran many times, due to economic challenges they must return to Iran.

Ahmad Javad, 20, is an 11th grade student. He says that although he was forcibly deported three times by Iran’s military forces, unemployment forced him to leave his studies and go to Iran.

“When we leave Kabul for Iran, on the way to Iran we face many dangers. There is no employment in Afghanistan, we have to go to Iran,” Javad, a resident of Balkh, told TOLOnews.

Azizurahman, another Afghan who wants to go back to Iran to find a job there, said he was forcibly deported by Iranian security forces.

“We were working when they arrested us. They told us to go back to Afghanistan, they … harmed us and took our money,” he said.

Meanwhile, some immigrants’ rights activists in Iran said that although the recent census process allowed many Afghans to stay, the fact that their status may not be continued after the allotted six months makes their future precarious, especially those who want to bring family members to Iran.

“The census process has reduced the deportation of Afghan refugees from Iran, but the immigrants whose families are in Afghanistan want to bring their families to Iran and receive permission for them,” said Asefa Stanekzai, an Afghan migrants’ rights activist in Iran.

However, the Islamic Emirate said it is trying to address Afghan migrants’ challenges in Iran through diplomatic dialogue.

“First of all, we are trying to solve the problems of Afghan migrants in Iran through diplomatic channels, and secondly, now the security situation in Afghanistan is good and employment opportunities are provided, they should return to their country,” Bilal Karimi, deputy spokesman of the Islamic Emirate, told TOLOnews.

The census process documenting Afghan refugees in Iran started in April and continued until the month of May, and according to officials of the Iranian government, 2.3 million Afghan refugees registered.

Facing Poverty, Afghan Youth Return to Iran
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Russia Seeks to Expand Relations with Afghanistan: Lavrov

In the meantime, officials at the Ministry for Disaster Management pledged to distribute aid to needy families.

Russia is seeking to expand relations in politics and economics with Afghanistan, said Anton Lavrov, Russian deputy ambassador for Afghanistan, on Wednesday.

A shipment of more than 23 tons of Russian aid for the families affected by earthquakes and flooding arrived in Kabul on Wednesday.

At the Kabul airport, Lavrov told reporters that the aid arrived in Kabul to assist those affected by earthquakes and flooding (those injured or needing shelter). He said, “We hope Russia-Afghan cooperation of humanitarian assistance can continue.” He also said that Russia wants friendly relations with Afghanistan and will seek to further improve relations in political and economic areas.

In the meantime, officials at the Ministry for Disaster Management pledged to distribute aid to needy families.

“This is not for affected people in just one or two provinces, we have specific plans for affected people, and the distribution of humanitarian aid is continuing, we reached some provinces and will assist other provinces as well,” said Ghulam Ghaws Naseri, finance deputy of of the Ministry for Disaster Management.

Earlier, the Russian Ministry of Defense provided sixteen tons of humanitarian aid for the affected families of the recent earthquake in Paktika and Khost provinces.

Russia Seeks to Expand Relations with Afghanistan: Lavrov
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Afghans in US immigration limbo watch Ukrainians breeze through

Al Jazeera

Thousands of at-risk Afghans continue to wait for their humanitarian parole and visa applications to progress.

Zahra was heading home from work on June 23 in business attire and a headscarf when she was stopped at a checkpoint manned by Taliban guards in Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul. They reprimanded her for not wearing clothing they deemed appropriate and demanded that she instead wear a head covering that conceals everything besides the wearer’s eyes.

“Many times the [Taliban] stopped us on the street,” Zahra said, adding that on some occasions, fighters have even pointed guns in her face and yelled at her. “I changed my outfit because I have no choice.”

After returning to power last August, the Taliban imposed sweeping restrictions on women, including the types of jobs they could do. According to the International Labour Organization, the share of women in employment is expected to fall by 21 percent by mid-2022,

Zahra – who is not using her real name for security reasons (like all Afghans mentioned in this story) – said she is able to work in the United Nations compound in Kabul thanks to an agreement the organisation reached with the Taliban. However, her brother, who worked with the United States military in Afghanistan, received two letters containing death threats from the Taliban in March and has been forced to remain in hiding.

Zahra and several of her family members have applied for the special immigrant visa (SIV) programme, open to people who worked with the US forces in Afghanistan and Iraq. Yet, as her own SIV case languished, she also decided in October 2021 to apply for humanitarian parole, a procedure that allows certain at-risk applicants to temporarily enter the US. Her SIV case was eventually denied by the State Department in January 2022 and Zahra then placed all her hopes on the parole process.

But to her dismay, she has not received any response to her application in almost nine months – and since March, has watched Ukrainians being processed more easily. According to US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) statistics, more than 60,000 refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine have received parole status between March 24 and June 23.

This leaves thousands of at-risk Afghans in limbo in third countries or in many cases in hiding from the Taliban government as they wait for their humanitarian parole applications and SIV cases to be processed.

The Taliban had promised amnesty to those who worked under the previous Western-backed government, but reports of the group’s fighters allegedly killing people have instilled a sense of fear among Afghans affiliated with the previous administration, various international organisations and the US.

Now, having watched Ukrainian refugees receive comparatively quick processing – first under the general parole programme and later under the one the US set up specifically for Ukrainians in April – many Afghans have expressed frustration with what they see as discriminatory treatment by US immigration agencies, which has compounded the deep psychological distress many had already been experiencing as they wait to be evacuated.

Abdullah, 25, worked for years with the Afghan army as a cybersecurity engineer and after the fall of Kabul, started receiving threatening phone calls from Taliban members. When he changed his phone number, the Taliban authorities sent his family a court summons. So when he heard he could apply for humanitarian parole he was overjoyed.

“Suddenly news came that there is a programme, humanitarian parole. If you apply for that, all Afghans that are at risk are eligible for this programme,” he said. “The hope I lost, I got that hope back.”

But Abdullah, who applied in October, has now lost hope. In May, he fled to Iran in the hope of getting a visa to Brazil.

Although Abdullah is glad Ukrainians are able to seek shelter in the US, he said he feels disappointed and discriminated against.

All eight Afghans Al Jazeera spoke with, including Abdullah, said the disparities between the handling of Afghan and Ukrainian immigration cases, together with the vagaries of their long visa processes, have affected their mental health.

Fawzia, an SIV applicant who relocated to Pakistan from Kabul in early May for her visa interview at the US embassy there, landed in the hospital twice that month due to panic attacks after she received an initial refusal of her application through the consular system.

She later found out that the refusal did not necessarily mean the end of her case, but the 37-year-old was nevertheless devastated.

“In Afghanistan, the Taliban might kill the person,” Fawzia argued, “but being this much disappointed, that 100 percent will kill the person.”

Javed, 38, an SIV applicant in Kabul, said he lives in fear every day because he worked as an operations manager and translator at Bagram airbase, the largest US military installation in Afghanistan.

“Be sure, they will kill me, suddenly, without any daylight,” he said, noting that he has already been interrogated twice by the Taliban but was able to conceal his past work.

According to a January report, the UN has received “credible allegations” that Taliban authorities and their allies have killed individuals who previously worked with the US-led coalition in Afghanistan.

Javed added that in his view, Afghan SIV applicants have taken a back seat since the war in Ukraine started.

Although US authorities maintain that they are doing their best to adjudicate Afghan parole and SIV applications, a lawsuit filed in May by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Massachusetts against DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas claims that the department arbitrarily shifted its standards for humanitarian parole for Afghans.

“In September we were hearing … [that Afghans should] file humanitarian parole,” said Dan Berger, a lawyer at the law firm Curran, Berger, and Kludt who is supervising the ACLU lawsuit. “Sometime around the late fall, early winter, the messaging changed.”

During the Kabul airlift in late August, Mayorkas authorised US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers to parole certain Afghans, including those eligible for SIV. And according to the ACLU complaint, US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) promoted humanitarian parole as a solution for people trying to escape the crisis in Afghanistan.

But the complaint states that after the US had received “tens of millions” of dollars in application fees, USCIS changed the rules for parole, leading to denials or indefinite delays for thousands of people.

According to a DHS spokesperson, USCIS received more than 46,000 properly submitted parole applications from Afghans between July 1, 2021, and June 2, 2022, of which the vast majority remain unadjudicated. Only 297 Afghans were approved during that time.

Meanwhile, under the Uniting for Ukraine parole programme for Ukrainian refugees announced on April 21, more than 38,000 Ukrainians have been authorised to travel to the US according to the DHS, in addition to more than 22,000 Ukrainians who arrived on other types of parole outside the programme. Another 34,000 Ukrainian nationals have also arrived on visas since March 24.

“I think a lot does have to do with political will,” Berger said. “The programme that’s been set up for Ukraine, I’ve had people get here in weeks, literally, with very little processing and no filing fee.”

According to the DHS spokesperson, this is because it is thought that Ukrainians will return to their country after the conflict, while Afghans will require permanent resettlement in the US.

On the SIV front, a spokesperson for the State Department maintained that it is committed to “streamlin[ing] the SIV programme,” and is “developing processing alternatives” for those unable to reach countries where US consular services are available.

But even if Afghans make it to third countries, their problems are far from over. Sardar, an SIV applicant who relocated to Pakistan in May with the help of EVAC, an American non-profit organisation, will likely have to wait for a decision on his case without the right to work in Pakistan after the US delayed his case by eight months.

The US evacuated some 116,000 people during the Kabul airlift in August 2021, and according to the DHS, more than 79,000 Afghans have arrived in the US since then. However, due to the chaotic nature of the airlift at that time, not all the evacuees were from groups thought to be in jeopardy.

According to Berger, there was a window to rectify the problem by the swift processing of humanitarian parole applications for eligible Afghans at that time but creating a programme like the current one for Ukrainians remains unlikely.

For Zahra, her options for evacuation are dwindling, and if her humanitarian parole requests remain undecided, she can only hope her family gets the SIV – but not her. She says she has little hope in Afghanistan where there are few work opportunities and secure existence.

“I don’t think there is going to be a hope in what next is coming,” she said.

“It’s like a hell, like you are burning in a fire every second. I’m completely disappointed from life,” she added.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA
Afghans in US immigration limbo watch Ukrainians breeze through
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