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'We are all living with fear': Afghans who worked with US desperate to leave as Kabul falls

'We are all living with fear': Afghans who worked with US desperate to leave as Kabul falls
my phone is ringing off the hook. I am getting calls nonstop from ordinary afghans who are desperately afraid, who are trying their best to get out of the country to get their paperwork sorted out, Who want answers, who want clarity, who have worked for non governmental organizations. They say they can't even get people to answer the phone and they're so petrified there. So utterly, utterly petrified. I want to show you a little clip from a woman we spoke to earlier this morning. She worked for various number of international organizations including some U. S. Organizations. She is so afraid now for her life that she is in hiding. She didn't want to show her face but take a listen to what she had to say. It is not easy for a person to work a lot with international organization, having more than 10 years experience of working with international and now no one of them helped me just sending emails to different organizations that I work with you. But now no response. Are you angry? No, I'm not angry. But as a person that who forbid them and now I need their supports. It is not fair. You look very emotional as well. Yeah, because I'm thinking about my future. My daughter's what will happen to them if they kill me two daughters with without mother. Yeah. I just can't even begin to explain the heart egg. As an american journalist of sitting and looking that woman in the eye as tears are pouring down her face. She was saying I dreamt of a better future for my daughters And that has been taken away from me. In one moment, she's desperately pleading for help, like so many others who are desperately afraid in this uncertain moment.
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'We are all living with fear': Afghans who worked with US desperate to leave as Kabul falls
Now that the Taliban are in control of Kabul, Ismail is afraid to leave his house."I'm under the threat," he told CNN on Monday, "I'm like a prisoner."Ismail 바카라 게임 웹사이트 whose last name is being withheld to protect his safety 바카라 게임 웹사이트 is one of scores of Afghans who worked alongside the United States during its two-decade military campaign in Afghanistan and are now desperate for the U.S. government's help in getting out of the country.The rapid collapse of the Afghan capital city into the hands of the Taliban has left the U.S. scrambling to evacuate personnel from its embassy and has complicated efforts to relocate tens of thousands of Afghan Special Immigrant Visa applicants like Ismail who fear reprisal from the Taliban.Although the Taliban have claimed they will not harm those who worked for foreign forces, Ismail does not believe their assurances of safety, noting that the "Taliban are the people that they never keep their promise.""They are promise breakers," he said.Even before the fall of Kabul, advocates and bipartisan lawmakers urged the administration to take expedited action to ensure that Afghan allies were not left behind and slaughtered, warning about the backlog of tens of thousands of applicants and the slow pace of processing ahead of the full withdrawal of U.S. troops.Over the weekend, as the situation deteriorated in Afghanistan, the Department of Homeland Security and its federal partners worked overtime to pull long Excel lists of names of Afghan Special Immigrant Visa applicants to push through systems and get security checks, according to a DHS official 바카라 게임 웹사이트 a meticulous effort that requires cross-checking. The Defense Department was asked to help the State Department with the Special Immigrant Visa program "to accelerate and help the process due to the time delays," inherent in the application process, according to Garry Reid, who leads the Pentagon's Special Immigrant Visa effort.However, some applicants have waited years for their visas to be approved. Others, like Ismail, are working to get U.S. assistance after being denied visas, ensnared in bureaucratic red tape.Ismail worked alongside the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers at Bagram Air Base for years, working as an interpreter, driver and shooter."If something would have happened, he would have been in between the threat and the U.S. personnel, so he would have been the first line of defense," said Ryan Jackson, a former U.S. defense contractor who worked with Ismail at Bagram.Ismail, a father of four, told CNN, "I was working with the US troops to make good money to look after my family."'Strongest recommendation'In 2011, he applied for a Special Immigrant Visa, and his supervisor, John Spiekhout, wrote him a glowing recommendation."He is very intelligent, honist (sic), well educated, and his language Skills are Superb," Spiekhout wrote in a March 2011 letter shared with CNN by Jackson. "I give my strongest recommendation for approval of his Visa without hesitation."Jackson told CNN that not long after Spiekhout returned to Michigan, he took his own life."Imail's assistance with the SIV program kind of died with him," Jackson said.Ismail said his application was denied because the embassy was not able to reach Spiekhout to confirm his letter of recommendation.He is hopeful that a new letter of recommendation from Jackson will help his case.But for now, Ismail, like so many others, worries about remaining in Afghanistan under Taliban rule."We are all living with fear," he said.Although the Biden administration has said it will "accelerate the evacuation of thousands of Afghans eligible for U.S. Special Immigrant Visas" in the coming days, chaos at the Kabul airport has stymied evacuation flights, and CNN learned on Sunday that Special Immigrant Visa evacuation flights to Fort Lee, Virginia, had been halted for the time being as the administration prioritizes the evacuation of Americans.The administration has not announced which third countries will take in applicants and their families, although CNN reported last week that the U.S. is nearing a deal with Qatar.The U.S. Embassy in Kabul, which is key in processing the applicants, has shuttered and relocated to the airport, and the majority of its personnel are leaving Afghanistan.Refugee organizations are still waiting for guidance from the State Department on when Special Immigrant Visa applicants and refugees fleeing Afghanistan can depart the country, fielding calls in the interim from people desperate for information."There's a lot of confusion, a lot of worry," said Sunil Varghese, policy director at the International Refugee Assistance Project, which represents Special Immigrant Visa applicants and refugees. "We have clients that need to get to the airport to get out. We just don't know if it's safe to do so." One of the organization's Special Immigrant Visa clients had a flight canceled and hasn't received word about when it will be rescheduled.Three sources said Monday that the agencies haven't yet received an update on when the flights will kick back up again."It has been one surprise after another," one source said. "The tragedy is they've had years and years to process these people."

Now that the Taliban are in control of Kabul, Ismail is afraid to leave his house.

"I'm under the threat," he told CNN on Monday, "I'm like a prisoner."

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Ismail 바카라 게임 웹사이트 whose last name is being withheld to protect his safety 바카라 게임 웹사이트 is one of scores of Afghans who worked alongside the United States during its two-decade military campaign in Afghanistan and are now desperate for the U.S. government's help in getting out of the country.

The rapid collapse of the Afghan capital city into the hands of the Taliban has left the U.S. scrambling to evacuate personnel from its embassy and has complicated efforts to relocate tens of thousands of Afghan Special Immigrant Visa applicants like Ismail who fear reprisal from the Taliban.

Although the Taliban have claimed they will not harm those who worked for foreign forces, Ismail does not believe their assurances of safety, noting that the "Taliban are the people that they never keep their promise."

"They are promise breakers," he said.

Even before the fall of Kabul, advocates and bipartisan lawmakers urged the administration to take expedited action to ensure that Afghan allies were not left behind and slaughtered, warning about the backlog of tens of thousands of applicants and the slow pace of processing ahead of the full withdrawal of U.S. troops.

Over the weekend, as the situation deteriorated in Afghanistan, the Department of Homeland Security and its federal partners worked overtime to pull long Excel lists of names of Afghan Special Immigrant Visa applicants to push through systems and get security checks, according to a DHS official 바카라 게임 웹사이트 a meticulous effort that requires cross-checking. The Defense Department was asked to help the State Department with the Special Immigrant Visa program "to accelerate and help the process due to the time delays," inherent in the application process, according to Garry Reid, who leads the Pentagon's Special Immigrant Visa effort.

However, some applicants have waited years for their visas to be approved. Others, like Ismail, are working to get U.S. assistance after being denied visas, ensnared in bureaucratic red tape.

Ismail worked alongside the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers at Bagram Air Base for years, working as an interpreter, driver and shooter.

"If something would have happened, he would have been in between the threat and the U.S. personnel, so he would have been the first line of defense," said Ryan Jackson, a former U.S. defense contractor who worked with Ismail at Bagram.

Ismail, a father of four, told CNN, "I was working with the US troops to make good money to look after my family."

'Strongest recommendation'

In 2011, he applied for a Special Immigrant Visa, and his supervisor, John Spiekhout, wrote him a glowing recommendation.

"He is very intelligent, honist (sic), well educated, and his language Skills are Superb," Spiekhout wrote in a March 2011 letter shared with CNN by Jackson. "I give my strongest recommendation for approval of his Visa without hesitation."

Jackson told CNN that not long after Spiekhout returned to Michigan, he took his own life.

"Imail's assistance with the SIV program kind of died with him," Jackson said.

Ismail said his application was denied because the embassy was not able to reach Spiekhout to confirm his letter of recommendation.

He is hopeful that a new letter of recommendation from Jackson will help his case.

But for now, Ismail, like so many others, worries about remaining in Afghanistan under Taliban rule.

"We are all living with fear," he said.

Although the Biden administration has said it will "accelerate the evacuation of thousands of Afghans eligible for U.S. Special Immigrant Visas" in the coming days, chaos at the Kabul airport has stymied evacuation flights, and CNN learned on Sunday that Special Immigrant Visa evacuation flights to Fort Lee, Virginia, had been halted for the time being as the administration prioritizes the evacuation of Americans.

The administration has not announced which third countries will take in applicants and their families, although CNN reported last week that the U.S. is nearing a deal with Qatar.

The U.S. Embassy in Kabul, which is key in processing the applicants, has shuttered and relocated to the airport, and the majority of its personnel are leaving Afghanistan.

Refugee organizations are still waiting for guidance from the State Department on when Special Immigrant Visa applicants and refugees fleeing Afghanistan can depart the country, fielding calls in the interim from people desperate for information.

"There's a lot of confusion, a lot of worry," said Sunil Varghese, policy director at the International Refugee Assistance Project, which represents Special Immigrant Visa applicants and refugees. "We have clients that need to get to the airport to get out. We just don't know if it's safe to do so." One of the organization's Special Immigrant Visa clients had a flight canceled and hasn't received word about when it will be rescheduled.

Three sources said Monday that the agencies haven't yet received an update on when the flights will kick back up again.

"It has been one surprise after another," one source said. "The tragedy is they've had years and years to process these people."