Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

US residents in Afghanista­n ‘fearful’

Those left behind afraid ruling Taliban will find them

- By Bernard Condon and Julie Watson

Every night in yet another house in Afghanista­n’s capital, a U.S. green card-holding couple from California take turns sleeping, with one always awake to watch over their three young children so they can flee if they hear the footsteps of the Taliban.

They’ve moved seven times in two weeks, relying on relatives to take them in and feed them. Their days are an uncomforta­ble mix of fear and boredom, restricted to a couple of rooms where they read, watch TV and play “The Telephone Game.”

All of it goes on during the agonizing wait for a call from anybody who can help them get out. A U.S. State Department official contacted them several days ago to tell them they were being assigned a case worker, but they haven’t heard a word since. They tried and failed to get on a flight and now are talking to an internatio­nal rescue organizati­on.

“We are scared and keep hiding ourselves more and more,” the mother said in a text message to The Associated Press.

Through messages, emails and phone conversati­ons with loved ones and rescue groups, AP has pieced together what day-to-day life has been like for some of those left behind after the U.S. military’s withdrawal — that includes U.S. citizens, permanent U.S. resident green-card holders and visa applicants who aided U.S. troops during the war.

Those contacted by AP — who are not being identified for their own safety — described a fearful, furtive existence of hiding in houses for weeks, keeping the lights off at night,

moving from place to place, and donning baggy clothing and burqas to avoid detection if they absolutely must venture out.

All say they are scared the ruling Taliban will find them, throw them in jail, perhaps even kill them because they are Americans or had worked for the U.S. government. And they are concerned that the Biden administra­tion’s promised efforts to get them out have stalled.

When the phone rang in an apartment in Kabul a few weeks ago, the U.S. green card holder who answered — a truck driver from Texas visiting family — was hopeful it was the U.S. State Department finally responding to his pleas to get him and his parents on a flight out. Instead, it was the Taliban.

“We won’t hurt you. Let’s meet. Nothing will happen,” the caller said, according to the truck driver’s brother, who lives with him in Texas and spoke to him afterward. The call included a few ominous words: “We know where you are.”

That was enough to send the man fleeing from the Kabul apartment where he had been staying with his mother, his two teenage brothers and his father, who was in particular danger because he had worked for years for a U.S. contractor overseeing security guards.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told Congress this past week that the government does not track U.S. permanent residents with green cards in Afghanista­n but he estimates several thousand remain in the country, along

with about 100 U.S. citizens. He promised the U.S. government was working to get them out.

As of Tuesday, 36 American citizens had been evacuated and 24 green card holders since the U.S. military left last month, according to the State Department. More were flown out Friday but the administra­tion did not release those figures.

Neither the U.S. nor the Taliban have offered a clear explanatio­n why so few have been evacuated.

That is hardly encouragin­g to another green card holder from Texas, a grandmothe­r who recently watched from a rooftop as militants pulled up in a half-dozen police cars and Humvees to take over the house across the street.

“The Taliban. The Taliban,” she whispered into the phone to her American son in a Dallas suburb, a conversati­on the woman recounted to the AP.

She and her husband, who came to Kabul several months ago to visit relatives, are now terrified that the Taliban will not only uncover their American ties but those of their son back in Texas, who had worked for a U.S. military contractor for years.

Her son, who is also not being named, says he called U.S. embassy officials in Kabul several times before it shut down, filled out all the necessary paperwork, and even enlisted the help of a veteran’s group and members of Congress.

The Taliban government has promised to let Americans and Afghans with proper travel documents leave the country and to not retaliate against those who helped the United States. But U.N. human rights chief Michelle Bachelet said there is evidence they are not keeping their word. She warned Monday that the country had entered a

“new and perilous phase,” and cited credible reports of reprisal killings of Afghan military members and allegation­s of the Taliban hunting house-to-house for former government officials and people who cooperated with U.S. military and U.S. companies. AP reporters in Afghanista­n are not aware of any U.S. citizens or green card holders being picked up or arrested by the Taliban. But they have confirmed that several Afghans who worked for the previous government and military were taken in for questionin­g recently and released.

 ?? VICTOR J. BLUE/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Taliban fighters from Mazar-i-Sharif patrol Tuesday in Afghanista­n’s Panjshir Valley.
VICTOR J. BLUE/THE NEW YORK TIMES Taliban fighters from Mazar-i-Sharif patrol Tuesday in Afghanista­n’s Panjshir Valley.

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