The Sentinel-Record

U.S. to resume visa process for Afghan allies

- SUSANNAH GEORGE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Sharif Hassan of The Washington Post.

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The U.S. Embassy in Kabul will soon resume processing thousands of stalled special visa applicatio­ns for Afghans who aided U.S. forces after halting visa interviews in March because of the pandemic.

A State Department official said the embassy in Kabul would begin “a phased resumption” of in-person interviews in February. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity under rules imposed by the State Department, would not comment on how many visas the embassy expects to process.

More than 7,000 special visas allocated to Afghans by Congress in 2020 went unissued, compared with about 5,000 the year before, according to State Department data. Nearly 19,000 visa applicatio­ns were stuck in processing as of September 2019, according to a State Department audit last year, a number that was all but guaranteed to grow with the coronaviru­s disruption­s.

Created to support Afghans and Iraqis who came under threat for their work with the United States, the special visa programs have lengthy applicatio­ns processes that have prolonged the average wait time to three years. And as they wait, Afghan applicants to the program are increasing­ly vulnerable: The Taliban and other militant groups view them as traitors, putting them in a perilous position as the Taliban expands its influence and as thousands of U.S. troops have withdrawn from Afghanista­n.

Half a dozen special-visa applicants interviewe­d by The Washington Post this month said they believe their lives have been put at greater risk because of the processing delays last year. The program, called the Special Immigrant Visa, offers a fast track to U.S. citizenshi­p and benefits such as housing assistance that other immigrants, including refugees, are not entitled to.

Advocates are expecting “a waterfall of delays” after interviews were halted for nearly a year, according to Deepa Alagesan, a senior attorney with the Internatio­nal Refugee Assistance Project, an advocacy group supporting program applicants.

“Because this is a multistep process … if one step is put on hold, it’s inevitable that a bulge will form at that point in the system,” Alagesan said. She and other refugee advocates believe the backlog created by the 2020 slowdown will be felt for years unless the Biden administra­tion makes dramatic changes.

All Special Immigrant Visa applicants already hold some kind of security clearance that allows them to work closely with U.S. military or government personnel but are vetted again by multiple U.S. security and intelligen­ce agencies. Applicants are also required to sit for multiple interviews and a rigorous medical examinatio­n. In all,

14 steps are required before an applicant and his or her immediate family is cleared to travel.

One applicant, a 37-yearold father of four who worked as an interprete­r for the U.S. Army, said he began receiving death threats by phone in 2015. The former interprete­r spoke on condition that his name, current occupation and home province not be disclosed out of concerns for his safety.

The voice on the line would say, “We know who you are, that you are working for the enemy, and if we find you, we will kill you,” he recalled. The threats were enough to spur him to begin thinking about ways to keep his family safe. He applied to the Special Immigrant Visa program in 2017.

Over the past year, his situation has become increasing­ly desperate. The U.S. Army unit he once interprete­d for, who nicknamed him “Tom Cruise” because of his willingnes­s to go on any mission, withdrew from his province in early 2020, and since then the threats against him have become more intense.

Last month the former interprete­r was summoned by the local branch of Afghanista­n’s main intelligen­ce agency.

“They said, we have some bad news for you and your family,” he recounted. The intelligen­ce officers told him his name was on a list of former U.S. interprete­rs the Taliban wanted dead. They believed he was being followed by a Taliban informant in the provincial capital where he lives, he said.

For days, the former interprete­r said he didn’t know what to do, and so he just stayed at home, but eventually he was forced to return to work. He said he expects to be killed at any moment.

Five other applicants to the program described a similar pattern of increased threats as visa processing was put on hold last year. Many say they also fear falling victim to targeted killings that are on the rise in parts of Afghanista­n under government control for which officials, including the U.S. military command in Kabul, blame the Taliban.

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