Scottish Daily Mail

We never dreamed this day would come!

In another victory for award-winning Mail campaign, Afghan interprete­r and wife finally brought to safety in UK say:

- By David Wlliams

IT was the moment that Mohammad and Rohina Wardak had dreamt of but feared would never happen while the Taliban controlled Afghanista­n.

Last night, on a damp, grey evening, the former translator for the British military and his wife stepped off an RAF plane on to English soil, their excitement matched only by relief.

‘This is a moment we have prayed for, dreamt of but did not believe could really happen as our hopes had been dashed so many times, our hearts broken and lives shattered,’ Mohammad, 30, said.

‘We have lived so long apart, cruelly and wrongly denied the chance everyone should have to live with their partner that this is an unforgetta­ble, magical moment...we have survived apart and hope we can finally begin a new life together.’

The couple were on the third mercy flight, the largest yet, bringing vulnerable Afghans to the UK from countries bordering their homeland. Among the 124 passengers were 29 Afghans from the LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transsexua­l) community who have been persecuted by the Taliban.

The flight also included interprete­rs and other Afghans who qualified to come to Britain under the Arap (Afghan Relocation­s and Assistance Policy) and LOTR (Leave Outside the Rules) schemes. Where the flight took off from has not been disclosed for security reasons.

Since the Taliban takeover of Afghanista­n in August, UK nationals and vulnerable Afghans, including Rohina, have been forced to make their own way to neighbouri­ng countries from where they can fly to the

UK. For Mohammad and his wife of four years, 22, it has been an extraordin­ary struggle to be together, their case championed by this newspaper’s award-winning Betrayal of the Brave campaign. They had feared they would be apart for years more after Rohina had failed to force her way through the crush around Kabul’s airport to board an RAF evacuation flight in August as Western forces pulled out of Afghanista­n.

Four times she battled to reach the airport after being told by UK officials a flight was waiting for her, but each time she was forced back. Twice she collapsed unconsciou­s and was trampled on by the seething crowds.

Once she had to be carried clear, her feet bloodied by the crush. ‘At that time my wife had to go to hospital and we thought we would not be together for a long, long time and Rohina was beginning to question the marriage itself,’ said Mohammad, who now lives in Newport, South Wales.

Mohammad and Rohina had been engaged when Mohammad, who worked for four years with UK troops on the frontlines of Helmand, was relocated to Britain in 2015. He returned to marry two years later but due to immigratio­n rules, she was unable to join him and had to apply for a visa.

Had they been married when he was given refuge, then she would have been allowed to come to the UK automatica­lly.

Rohina tried for more than two years for a visa – the processing hampered by the Covid crisis – but to her dismay in April she was refused by the British Embassy in Kabul, one of ten wives of ex-translator­s in the UK rejected. In desperatio­n, the families began an unpreceden­ted legal action against the British government to allow them to join their husbands in this country. The wives, whose cases were highlighte­d by the Daily Mail, accused the Home Office of endangerin­g their lives and ‘unreasonab­ly’ denying them the right to a family life.

In early August the court ruled in the wives’ favour but by then they faced making it past Taliban checkpoint­s and then thousands besieging Kabul Airport. On one heartbreak­ing day, one wife made it, but Rohina didn’t.

After the Taliban seized control, Mohammad refused to give up. As he heard that some Afghans, including translator­s and their families, were crossing into neighbouri­ng countries, he decided he could not wait any longer and flew to the Middle

BETRAYAL OF THE BRAVE

East, begging the British High Commission for help.

A border pass was arranged for Rohina, who held a visa for the UK, and she travelled – but there was more agony as she was initially refused permission to cross. ‘It was quite awful,’ said Mohammad. ‘We cried. We were 100 metres apart either side of the border.’

Last night as they arrived, they thanked the British diplomats who helped their passage and the Daily Mail’s Betrayal of the Brave campaign.

Mohammad said: ‘We believe this wonderful moment has been made possible with the help of your hard work, you never gave up on interprete­rs and their wives, you gave us hope when none seemed to be there and you will always be with us.’

 ?? ?? Reunited at last: Mohammad and Rohina Wardak before flying to the UK together to start their new life yesterday
Reunited at last: Mohammad and Rohina Wardak before flying to the UK together to start their new life yesterday
 ?? ?? Frontline: Mohammad as interprete­r for UK troops
Frontline: Mohammad as interprete­r for UK troops
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom