Afghan ‘child brides’
US officials are looking into reports that elderly Afghan men were permitted to evacuate with young girls they claimed as “wives” — with some of the purported child brides brought to an Army base in Wisconsin.
An internal State Department document dated Aug. 27 said that staff overseeing the admission of refugees at Fort McCoy — about 100 miles northwest of Madison, Wis. — had “reported multiple cases of minor females who presented as ‘married’ to adult Afghan men, as well as polygamous families,” The Associated Press reported Friday.
“Department of State has requested urgent guidance,” added the document, seen by the AP and sent to all US embassies and consulates as well as military command centers in Florida.
It is not clear how many incidents have been reported.
Meanwhile, US officials in the United Arab Emirates recently sent a diplomatic cable to Washington warning that some young Afghan girls had been forced into marriages in order to escape Afghanistan after the Taliban takeover.
Officials familiar with the cable told the AP it described allegations by several girls at the Humanitarian City in Abu Dhabi that they had been sexually assaulted by their “husbands.” The officials sought guidance on how to handle such cases.
Officials told the AP that they take all such allegations seriously but that many of them are anecdotal and difficult to prove, particularly amid the crush of Afghan evacuees at multiple locations in the Middle East, Europe and the US.
While child marriage is not uncommon in Afghanistan, the US has strict policies against human trafficking that include prosecution of offenders and sanctions for countries that don’t crack down on it.
In recent days, some Republican members of Congress have expressed concerns that the Biden administration allowed Afghans with criminal records or ties to terror groups to be evacuated while thousands of others who assisted US-led NATO forces were left to fend for themselves in hostile territory.
A letter to President Biden signed by 26 GOP senators Thursday estimated that more than 57,000 Afghans were evacuated who are not US citizens, green card holders or eligible for so-called Special Immigrant Visas (SIVs).