Afghanistan welcomes Nat Geo girl
Afghanistan’s president on Wednesday welcomed back Sharbat Gula, the green-eyed woman immortalised on a National Geographic cover, after she was deported from Pakistan to the war-torn homeland she first fled decades ago.
Pakistani officials handed over the woman, whose haunting eyes were captured in a cover photo taken in a refugee camp in the 1980s, to Afghan border authorities after escorting her from a Peshawar hospital where she was being treated for Hepatitis C.
Sharbat Gula, arguably Afghanistan’s most famous refugee, was arrested last month for living in Pakistan on fraudulent identity papers.
“Pleased to have welcomed Sharbat Gula & her family back to (Afghanistan),” President Ashraf Ghani said on Twitter. “Her life inspires us all. She represents all the brave women of this land.”
The president and first lady Rula Ghani honoured her and her children at a ceremony at the presidential palace in Kabul.
Ghani has promised to provide her with a furnished apartment to ensure she “lives with dignity and security” in Afghanistan.
Speaking to AFP last week in Pakistan, Sharbat Gula said she was “heartbroken” at the prospect of returning.
“Afghanistan is only my birthplace, but Pakistan was my homeland and I always considered it as my own country,” she said. “I had decided to live and die in Pakistan but they did the worst thing with me. It’s not my fault that I born there (in Afghanistan). I am dejected. I have no other option but to leave.”
Sharbat Gula said she first arrived in Pakistan an orphan, some four or five years after the Soviet invasion of 1979, one of millions of Afghans who have sought refuge over the border since.