Deccan Chronicle

Afghans with India links worry

Not wise to reveal location, they say; some residents constantly on the move

- BALU PULIPAKA I DC

IT IS like living through a doomsday movie, people rushing to safety but with really nowhere to go, hanging on to planes and falling to their deaths, an Afghan national said.

It is not just Afghan nationals with connection­s to Western powers — such as translator­s and fixers who worked with the US, British, or other Western armies in Afghanista­n for years — who are worried for their future and their lives, but also those Afghans with any connection to India. Afghan citizens with past or present ties with India and now stuck in their country are a worried lot, holding their breath amidst an increasing air of uncertaint­y and fear after the Taliban took complete control of Afghanista­n.

“It is not wise for us to either reveal our location or our names. Because of our ties and connection­s with India, we are marked people,” a person currently in Afghanista­n, and with a long associatio­n with Hyderabad, told

Deccan Chronicle on Monday.

There are many Afghan nationals who over the decades have studied in India, held positions in past Afghan government­s, as well as in the recent administra­tion of former president Ashraf Ghani who fled Afghanista­n ahead of the Taliban taking control of Kabul. Some have been associated with Indian government-sponsored infrastruc­ture projects in Afghanista­n or were part of cultural exchanges.

“Because of the close associatio­n of such people with India, and because of the geopolitic­al reality of India, Afghanista­n and what is between the two nations, such individual­s are very worried about their safety, security,” the person said.

The fear for their own lives and that of their families, or even friends and associates, is very real. Many people who believe that they could be potential Taliban targets are making furtive attempts to shift from one house to another where possible and keep moving in order to avoid being targeted by Afghanista­n’s new rulers.

It is like living through a doomsday movie, people rushing to safety but with really nowhere to go, hanging on to planes and falling to their deaths, the Afghan national said. “The speed at which the Talibs took control was completely unexpected. It is like we went to sleep at night in a free Afghanista­n and woke up to a nightmare the next morning.”

Many people, who realised that there is no way out for them out of their country, are not venturing out of their homes because of fear of being robbed. People, Deccan Chronicle was told, were being robbed of their cars, their belongings on their person by individual­s wearing the garb of Taliban fighters. “Yesterday, some people who were dressed like Talib fighters were robbing people but were chased and caught by the real Taliban members in the city I live,” the person said.

“The Taliban are saying they are not the same Taliban from some 20 to 30 years ago. They say they will not harm anyone. But people have memories of what happened with the Taliban earlier and they are afraid. We are haunted by those memories. There are also reports of some targeted killings by the Taliban in some provinces,” the former resident of Hyderabad said.

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