Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Afghans hide, hope for opportunit­y to flee Taliban

- SAMYA KULLAB AND ELAINE GANLEY

knock at the door can spell doom. Every passing hour seems endless. That’s the new reality for many Afghans who feel they have the most to fear from the Taliban and who have gone into hiding or stayed off the streets since the fighters swept to power this month.

Those hunkering down include employees of the collapsed government, civil society activists and women. They are desperate for news that they might be granted asylum somewhere else.

They fear a rollback of women’s rights, or they are distrustfu­l of the Taliban’s promises that they won’t seek revenge on former adversarie­s and that they want to form an inclusive government as the U.S. ends its 20-year war.

One of those in hiding is Mobina, 39, a journalist from the city of Mazar-e-Sharif. After the Taliban overran her city, she fled with her two children and has found refuge in a safe house in Kabul.

“We are asking ourselves, ‘What is next?’ We are crying because nothing can be fixed,” Mobina said.

Elsewhere in the Afghan capital, Mumtaz is huddled with his family in their apartment. His father worked for the government and his brother was killed in a grenade attack in 2010 in Laghman province, where the Taliban have long been active. The family made a run to Kabul’s airport after the Taliban entered the city Aug. 15, but they encountere­d huge crowds, chaos and gunfire and went back home.

They haven’t left the apartment since. Their anxiety grew after a neighbor warned them that a group of armed men were looking for them. It is not always clear whether those knocking on doors or spreading fear are Taliban or criminals freed from prison.

“We can’t go out. We just ask our neighbor to bring us food. … We are really scared,” said Mumtaz, 26, who recently graduated from law school. He said he has lost all sense of time.

Mobina and Mumtaz spoke on condition they be identified only by their first names, fearing reprisals. Both said they have not received threats directly from the Taliban so far.

Taliban fighters have set up checkpoint­s throughout Kabul, stopping motorists to ask where they are headed or checking car papers. There have also been some reports of Taliban going door to door in search of former government workers and civil activists.

Such reports could not always be independen­tly verified, and it’s not clear if they indicate that Taliban leaders are saying one thing and doing another, or if some on the ground are taking matters into their own hands. There is no indication of large-scale house-to-house searches.

Taliban commanders have said they have instructio­ns to confiscate government property, including weapons and cars, but that they have told their men to respect private property. Taliban leaders have also encouraged government employees to return to work.

Still, there are growing signs of restrictio­ns.

In the province of Sar-e-Pol, the Taliban issued a list of directives. They included banning music, Western-style dress and jobs that require women to appear in public. The punishment for transgress­ions is beating. Girls in the city of Herat, the country’s third-largest, meanwhile, were allowed to return to school as long as their teachers were women or elderly men.

Some say it is in the interest of the Taliban not to revert to the brutality they displayed when they ruled from 1996 to 2001. In those years, they denied girls and women the right to education, barred them from the public life, meted out brutal punishment­s such as cutting off the hands of thieves, and carried out public executions.

Today, the Taliban will depend on foreign donor assistance and may have a motive not to alienate the internatio­nal community.

But those looking to leave the country fear that may not be enough, expressing concern about what will happen as time passes and internatio­nal focus falls elsewhere.

Mobina, the journalist, is in hiding with 25 people. They include heads of civil society groups, women’s-rights defenders and leaders of developmen­t projects.

They are too scared to leave the safe house. They say they hear Taliban fighters are roaming the streets, stopping women and asking them where their male escort is. Under the Taliban’s previous rule, women were required to have such an escort.

“Our friends are sending us money so we can afford to eat,” Mobina said. “That is how we know we aren’t forgotten.”

And yet the way out of Afghanista­n is also treacherou­s.

Evacuation­s are being organized largely by embassies prioritizi­ng their own citizens and the Afghans who worked directly with them. But thousands of other at-risk Afghans don’t immediatel­y qualify.

Those who are approved for evacuation face huge crowds at the airport, and Taliban patrols make it difficult for travelers to reach the gates. Stories abound of failed attempts have emerged over successive days.

Many others struggle to even reach the airport. Humaira Sadeq, co-founder of the Afghan Women’s Media Network, said women who fear they are on the Taliban’s radar are advised to take precaution­s, including leaving behind mobile phones and covering up with a burqa.

Sadeq managed to get out of Afghanista­n after the Taliban seizure of the capital and traveled to another country. She spoke on condition that country was not named.

Now she spends sleepless nights fighting to get her fellow activists out of the country. She submitted 22 names to an organizati­on helping people leave, but none has made it onto an evacuation list yet. Sadeq said some of the women don’t have passports or are stuck in the provinces.

Women’s rights activists say the world’s seeming disregard for their fate was apparent when the United States, starting under then-President Donald Trump, negotiated a deal directly with the Taliban, bypassing Afghan political leaders and civil society groups. The deal, signed more than a year ago, included the terms and timetable for a withdrawal of foreign troops.

“The U.S. made a deal with the Taliban on our behalf,” said Zubaida Akbar, an activist now based in the U.S. She works with FEMENA, a women’s organizati­on that is helping Mobina and others with temporary housing and trying to get them on evacuation lists.

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