National Post

Save our families, interprete­rs plead

Resettled Afghans seek those left behind

- Lee Berthiaume

• Former Afghan interprete­rs now living in Canada are pleading for the federal government to help extended family members stranded in Afghanista­n as the Taliban marches across the country.

The former interprete­rs are among about 800 Afghans resettled under two different programs between 2008 and 2012 who say their previous work with Canada has left parents and siblings back home at risk of Taliban reprisals.

“If they cannot get their hands on you, they will get your brother, they will get your sister, they will get your parents to punish you wherever you are because they cannot get their hands on you,” said Khan, who arrived in Canada in 2012. His full name is not being disclosed to protect his family’s safety.

The Liberal government announced two weeks ago that it would expedite the resettleme­nt of possibly thousands of Afghans who worked with Canada as interprete­rs, cultural advisers and support staff since 2001, as well as their families.

But the effort has been plagued by questions and controvers­y, including whether the extended families of those like Khan’s who previously came to Canada are eligible for assistance.

Immigratio­n Minister Marco Mendicino acknowledg­ed during a news conference last month the threat the Taliban poses to the families of interprete­rs already resettled in Canada, and invited anyone who believed their relatives could be eligible for help to contact his office.

Khan said he did contact Mendicino’s office to see about helping his parents and siblings but was directed to a bureaucrat at Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Canada.

“I called the IRCC,” Khan said. “They were like: ‘We don’t have any details regarding this. So, if we don’t have anything, we can’t give you anything. This is how far I went.”

Mendicino’s office did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on Monday.

There are also concerns the government is taking a case-by-case approach to applicatio­ns rather than laying out specific criteria to ensure everyone knows who is eligible for resettleme­nt, and why.

“We don’t want to be individual cases,” said Noori, another former interprete­r who fled for Canada under a previous program and is now trying to get his parents and nine siblings out of Afghanista­n. “We want a collective policy for all of us.”

Several former interprete­rs are now planning a rally on Parliament Hill on Tuesday to draw attention to their cause and pressure the government into helping extended family members.

A similar rally was held in Vancouver last week, which organizers said drew dozens of former interprete­rs, Canadian military veterans and family members who are worried about friends and loved ones back in Afghanista­n.

“In Afghanista­n, if you are employed by someone like the Canadian Forces, then your whole family is in danger because of you,” Noori said. “If the terrorists cannot reach you to harm you, they can harm you in another way by killing your father, your brother.”

Those concerns have only grown in intensity as the Taliban has continued to capture large swaths of territory following the sudden withdrawal of thousands of U.S. troops from Afghanista­n in recent weeks.

The fact the U.S. over the weekend welcomed its first planeload of former interprete­rs onto American soil has also ratcheted up the frustratio­n and confusion surroundin­g Canada’s own efforts.

That confusion was exacerbate­d last week by word anyone wanting to apply had only 72 hours.

That narrow window was later retracted following an outcry from former interprete­rs and veterans.

Retired corporal Tim Laidler, who is now executive director of the Institute for Veterans Education and Transition at the University of British Columbia, said the lack of informatio­n and clarity has left people in Canada and Afghanista­n unsure what to do.

“This is a crisis, there’s people’s lives at risk and there’s no time for half-baked plans,” said Laidler, who ran for the Conservati­ves in the 2015 federal election.

“If you’re going to say ‘Contact my office,’ you need to have a plan and the staff in place to actually follow through on that. This confusion is causing people to lose faith in the process and the system, and ultimately I think it’s going to cost lives.”

WE DON’T WANT TO BE INDIVIDUAL CASES. WE WANT A COLLECTIVE POLICY.

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