Chattanooga Times Free Press

Secrecy shrouds refugees sent to base in Kosovo

- BY BEN FOX

WASHINGTON — The U.S. is welcoming tens of thousands of Afghans airlifted out of Kabul but has disclosed little publicly about a small group who remain overseas: dozens who triggered potential security issues during security vetting and have been sent to an American base in the Balkan nation of Kosovo.

Human rights advocates have raised concerns about the Afghans diverted to Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo over the past six weeks, citing a lack of transparen­cy about their status and the reasons for holding them back. It’s unclear what might become of any who cannot be cleared to come to the United States.

“We are obviously concerned,” said Jelena Sesar, a researcher for Amnesty Internatio­nal who specialize­s in the Balkans. “What really happens with these people, especially the people who don’t pass security vetting? Are they going to be detained? Are they going to have any access to legal assistance? And what is the plan for them? Is there any risk of them ultimately being returned to Afghanista­n?”

The Biden administra­tion says it’s too soon to answer some of these questions, at least publicly, as it works feverishly to resettle the Afghans who were evacuated following the Taliban takeover of Afghanista­n in August.

The lack of public informatio­n has made it a challenge for those who closely track the fate of refugees. “There’s not a lot of transparen­cy in terms of how the security check regime works,” said Sunil Varghese, policy director for the Internatio­nal Refugee Assistance Project. “We don’t know why people are being sent to Kosovo for additional screening, what that additional screening is, how long it will take.”

So far, more than 66,000 Afghans have arrived in the U.S since Aug. 17, undergoing what the government portrays as a rigorous security vetting process to screen out national security threats from among a population that includes people who worked as interprete­rs for the American military as well as their own country’s armed forces.

Of those, about 55,000 are at U.S. military bases around the country, where they complete immigratio­n processing and medical evaluation­s and quarantine before settling in the United States. There are still 5,000 people from the evacuation at transit points in the Middle East and Europe, according to the Department of Homeland Security, which is managing the effort known as Operation Allies Welcome.

The resettleme­nt effort is under intense scrutiny following waves of criticism of President Joe Biden for the frantic evacuation U.S. forces and allies as part of the withdrawal from Afghanista­n.

“The fact that some people have been flagged by our counterter­rorism, intelligen­ce, or law enforcemen­t profession­als for additional screening shows our system is working,” said National Security Council spokeswoma­n Emily Horne.

The exact number at Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo, a small nation in southeaste­rn Europe that gained independen­ce from Serbia with U.S. support in 2008, fluctuates as new people arrive and others leave when security issues, such as missing documents, are resolved, according to U.S. officials.

 ?? SGT. GLORIA KAMENCIK/U.S. ARMY VIA AP ?? U.S.-affiliated Afghans arrive at the Pristina Internatio­nal Airport in Kosovo on Oct. 16.
SGT. GLORIA KAMENCIK/U.S. ARMY VIA AP U.S.-affiliated Afghans arrive at the Pristina Internatio­nal Airport in Kosovo on Oct. 16.

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