The Daily Telegraph

Cameron urged to save Afghan interprete­rs at risk from Taliban

- By Steven Swinford DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR

DAVID Cameron must “urgently” offer sanctuary to Afghan interprete­rs, including one who worked for him, the head of the defence select committee has said.

Julian Lewis said it is “extraordin­ary” that Britain is refusing to give asylum to those who have put themselves at risk for Britain.

His warning came after reports that an Afghan military translator who was denied refuge in the UK had been killed while attempting to flee the Taliban.

Mr Lewis said: “Everybody knows that in Afghanista­n even the slightest suspicion or allegation that Afghans have helped Western forces amounts in effect to a death sentence.

“It is extraordin­ary that there should be any question of refusing sanctuary to a few hundred people who put themselves at risk in order to help the British mission in Afghanista­n.

“The tragic report today demonstrat­es the urgency of the situation.

“These people are in a special category of proven friends and allies who must not be abandoned.”

There have been growing calls for Mr Cameron to help Afghan interprete­rs after a 26-year-old known as Shaffy said he felt “abandoned” despite having put himself in danger by working for the Prime Minister.

He worked as one of the British Army’s most senior interprete­rs in Afghanista­n. He has said that photograph­s of him with the Prime Minister in 2011 have been used by the Taliban as evidence to back up their claims that he was a British spy. He accused the Government of abandoning him, despite working for six years with the British military and being caught up in two bomb blasts.

He is one of 200 Afghan interprete­rs who worked for British forces and have applied for help after being threatened by Taliban militants.

British police working in Kabul have recommende­d that they take measures to protect themselves such as changing their cars or their phones. However, none of them have been granted asylum in Britain. The interprete­rs missed out on a one-off assistance scheme set

‘Bringing them to safety in the UK would be fulfilment of a moral obligation and would benefit our country’

up last year by the Government for its Afghan employees, which includes an option to relocate to Britain.

The scheme only applied to those who had served on the frontline in Helmand province for at least 12 months and were still working as of December 2012.

Mr Lewis said: “Bringing them to safety in the UK would not only be the fulfilment of a moral obligation, but it would benefit our country to have here people who have shown themselves to share our values and beliefs.

“The British media has for months highlighte­d the imminent peril in which individual interprete­rs have been living. These specific cases [of interprete­rs being killed] tragically illustrate the accuracy of the fears that were expressed on their behalf.”

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