Scottish Daily Mail

Please rescue me, begs hero trapped in hellhole

- By David Williams and Larisa Brown

A FORMER interprete­r trapped in a ‘hellhole’ migrant camp has narrowly missed out on a major policy change allowing Afghans sanctuary in Britain.

Nesar, who worked for two years on the front line in Helmand with UK forces, resigned because of death threats.

He would normally have qualified under the new policy unveiled by Defence Secretary Ben Wallace and Home Secretary Priti Patel this weekend.

The change said those who served over 18 months on the front line and resigned will be given visas, affecting up to 100 interprete­rs plus their families.

But for Nesar, 29, and his wife Nazarine, 28, the change came too late as they had already fled

Afghanista­n out of desperatio­n in the hope of getting to the UK by boat. They are now trapped in the remains of the Moria camp on the Greek Island of Lesbos which burned to the ground this month.

The rule change exempts those who have already fled Afghanista­n because of the Taliban and are now in third countries – so Nesar and his wife no longer qualify. Last night, former Army officers appealed to the Government to show compassion and allow the interprete­r and his wife to the UK as an exceptiona­l case.

Dr Julian Lewis, former chair-working man of the defence select committee, is also asking the Home and Defence secretarie­s to make the scheme more generous. He said: ‘Even if they are out of Afghanista­n, they had to leave because of for us and we should reach out and rescue them.’

Speaking from the camp, Nesar told how his wife has spoken of killing herself. He added: ‘The Government

change of policy is great news and I thank them for recognisin­g the dangers translator­s face because of their work with the British, but for me stranded in a place that resembles a hellhole, it is impossible for me to return to Afghanista­n... I had no choice but to leave if I wanted to stay alive – and keep my wife alive...’

More than 13,000 refugees are living at the camp in grim conditions, with Covid an increasing problem.

Colonel Simon Diggins, former military attache at the British Embassy in Kabul, said: ‘With the new and welcome policy change, he [Nesar] could have been granted a visa. I therefore call on the Home Secretary to use her discretion under the Dublin III Regulation, to “claim” Nesar and his wife and process his claims, safely.’

The Mail’s Betrayal of the Brave campaign, which led calls for policy change, has highlighte­d the desperate plight of Nesar and dozens of other translator­s who believe they were ‘abandoned’ to the Taliban. Nesar worked with the British in Helmand from September 2009, leaving in 2011.

This was followed by three years with US Special Forces.

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