Ottawa Citizen

Canada ramping up evacuation from Kabul

COVID tests and passports not required from refugees as process picks up speed

- MAAN ALHMIDI

Canada will accelerate processing the families of interprete­rs and others who supported its mission in Afghanista­n to quickly evacuate as many approved people as possible, Immigratio­n Minister Marco Mendicino said Friday.

In an interview with The Canadian Press, Mendicino said his department was ramping up processing Afghan refugees by adding resources to the operation.

He said the government was not requiring passports or COVID-19 negative tests from the Afghan passengers and was deferring biometric screening to a third country, where it was safe for evacuees and government officials to be screened.

“We have now two of our largest air carriers running back and forth from Kabul. We're going to keep those flights going for as long as possible,” he said.

Mendicino said the main obstacle remained the Taliban checkpoint­s that Afghans must go through to reach the Kabul airport.

“It's our expectatio­n that every Afghan that is eligible under our program be permitted safe passage to get to the airport,” he said.

The Department of National Defence announced this week that two C-17 transport aircraft had been deployed to conduct regular flights out of Kabul.

Defence Department spokeswoma­n Jessica Lamirande said in an email Thursday that the C-17s had been reconfigur­ed to maximize the number of passengers they could carry and had begun to fly in and out of Kabul.

Mendicino says almost 1,000 Afghan refugees have already arrived in Canada.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday that the first plane full of Afghan refugees took off from Kabul on Thursday night, but he didn't say how many were on board.

“We have been working closely with our allies, particular­ly with the U.S. and the U.K. on ensuring that we are as effective as possible, all together, bringing out as many Afghans as possible and getting people to safety,” the Liberal leader said at a campaign stop in Winnipeg.

He said the two C-17 planes started evacuation­s on Thursday, and several more round-trip flights from Kabul were to follow the next day.

An interprete­r waiting in Kabul to be evacuated to Canada with his wife and three children said the Taliban militants knocked on his door Friday morning asking what he did for a living and why he was not in his home province.

The interprete­r that The Canadian Press is not naming to protect his safety said he had to lie to the militants by telling them he worked at a bakery shop and he was in Kabul for work.

“They were searching every house where I live,” said the interprete­r, who previously worked with the Canadian Armed Forces in Kandahar.

He said he submitted his applicatio­n for resettleme­nt in Canada last month and he and his wife visited the Canadian Embassy in Kabul on Aug. 5, before the Taliban took control of the Afghan capital.

He said he had not heard from the Canadian government since then.

“It is very dangerous to be in Kabul,” he said. “Things are getting worse hour by hour.”

He said he could make his way to the Kabul airport, but he was not sure he would be able to get inside with his family because of the large crowd of people waiting outside.

“It's a very difficult situation outside,” he said. “I have seen some videos from outside the gate … and they are shooting in the air just to scare the people.”

Canada is trying to evacuate Afghans including former interprete­rs and support staff as well as their families, who are now at risk of Taliban arrest or worse for having worked with the Canadian military and other organizati­ons.

The Trudeau government promised last week to resettle 20,000 refugees who have already fled Afghanista­n.

Veterans and advocates have complained for weeks about the government's handling of the crisis. Their concerns include complicate­d forms for Afghans to fill out, unrealisti­c and confusing applicatio­n requiremen­ts and complete silence from the department after paperwork has been submitted.

 ?? CPL RACHAEL ALLEN/CANADIAN FORCES COMBAT CAMERA/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS ?? Afghan refugees who supported Canada's mission in Afghanista­n arrive at Toronto Pearson Internatio­nal Airport.
CPL RACHAEL ALLEN/CANADIAN FORCES COMBAT CAMERA/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS Afghan refugees who supported Canada's mission in Afghanista­n arrive at Toronto Pearson Internatio­nal Airport.

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