Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GROUP IN STATE aids Afghans in move.

Advocate claims kids at great risk

- DOUG THOMPSON

FAYETTEVIL­LE — A group founded by a Washington County deputy prosecutor is helping to relocate 5,000 Afghan refugees with 1,500 children among them, including about 400 orphans.

These families and children need homes, said Kevin Metcalf, founder of the National Child Protection Task Force. Metcalf launched the task force in March 2019.

The group specialize­s in helping law enforcemen­t agencies in human traffickin­g and missing persons cases. Task force members know government officials and allied groups who fight human traffickin­g internatio­nally, Metcalf said.

Refugees are a windfall of potential victims for human trafficker­s, Metcalf said. He happened to know members of U.S. special forces in Kabul who had worked with Afghans.

They called him asking for his help to keep refugees safe, he said. Two members of his group went to Kabul, Afghanista­n’s capital, to help make sure the refugees were evacuated to somewhere safe, Metcalf said.

They have returned. Stateside, the task force is one of many U.S.-based groups helping in the crisis on a voluntary basis, coordinati­ng with U.S. and foreign government­s.

“People were handing their babies over the walls and the gates,” Metcalf said of the evacuation from Kabul.

Not only Afghans who had helped Americans and were in danger wanted their children out, he said.

The Taliban has a long,

well-documented history of allowing and committing abuse, he said. Orphans in particular are vulnerable to exploitati­on ranging from child labor to sexual abuse, he said, since they have no families to protect them.

“An exploited child in the United States can at least have hope that someday someone in authority will find out and do something,” he said. “A child whose own government exploits them doesn’t even have that.”

The Wall Street Journal reported earlier this month “Taliban commanders have demanded that communitie­s turn over unmarried women to become ‘wives’ for their fighters.”

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid denied these most recent reports, despite the Taliban’s history of such abuses when it ruled the country.

The task force helped arrange evacuation­s for the 5,000, with most going to Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates.

“I’m incredibly impressed with the Emirates,” Metcalf said.

The government and its people have been extremely generous and welcoming.

They are not able to offer permanent accommodat­ions, he said. The apartments occupied by refugees now are needed by still more refugees in transit from Afghanista­n.

So, now his group is working with U.S. armed services veterans and others to find permanent homes for the 5,000 refugees they assisted, hopefully near or within Afghan American communitie­s.

Canopy Northwest Arkansas, a refugee resettleme­nt agency in Fayettevil­le, could begin receiving refugees as early as this week, the nonprofit’s leadership recently announced. The organizati­on assists refugees with finding housing, work and other basic necessitie­s.

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