The Jewish Chronicle

Jewish groups call for ‘comprehens­ive’ plan for Afghan refugees

- BY ROSA DOHERTY

► JEWISH GROUPS have called on the UK government to announce a “comprehens­ive” plan to help refugees fleeing Afghanista­n after the Taliban swept to power in the country.

It comes as the government was forced to defend a resettleme­nt scheme which will see the UK take up to 20,000 Afghans in the coming years.

The Jewish Council for Racial Equality said it viewed the takeover by the Islamist militia “with increasing concern.

“We urge our government to formulate and announce specific plans for a comprehens­ive programme to assist in the evacuation and resettleme­nt of Afghan refugees into the UK.”

World Jewish Relief also called on the government to commit to a “sizeable resettleme­nt programme.”

The government has faced criticism that it is not doing enough after it said it would take 5,000 people in the first year of the resettleme­nt programme, and 20,000 overall.

Board of Deputies president Marie van der Zyl said Jews in the UK “share the world’s horror at the scenes unfolding in Afghanista­n.

“The Taliban’s sickening record of the repression of women and girls, and complete disregard for human rights, fill us all with great anxiety for the Afghan people.

“We call on the UK government to expand on its plans for the resettleme­nt of Afghan refugees, to whom the world now owes a duty of care and moral responsibi­lity.”

The Taliban, who were toppled by US-led forces in 2001, announced that Afghanista­n was now an “Islamic emirate” and under Sharia law.

Chaotic scenes unfolded at Kabul’s internatio­nal airport this week with thousands of people trying to board aircraft that were evacuating diplomatic staff.

Videos showed people clinging to and hanging off military planes that were trying to take off.

Simentov refused to leave on a private plane on Wednesday

► THE ONLY Jew living in Afghanista­n is reportedly determined to remain in the country to avoid giving a get, despite the nation’s capital and government falling to the Islamist militia of the Taliban.

Zebulon Simentov refused to leave on a private plane on Wednesday because going to Israel would mean granting a divorce to his wife, the philanthro­pist who organised the escape plan told the JC.

Israeli-born Moti Kahana said he spent “two days of resources and a huge amount of money” to organise the plan, but it took Mr Simentov just over half an hour to change his mind and reject the chance to leave Afghanista­n.

Reportedly Mr Simantov was already packing and reciting the prayer for travellers, the signal between them that he was agreeing to leave, when he suddenly changed his mind.

Though the Taliban are said to consider Mr Simentov an “infidel”, he claims to be a proud

Afghan and has said he does not want to leave his homeland.

Austrian-Afghan journalist Emran Feroz, who has previously met and interviewe­d Mr Simentov, said on Twitter that he was in touch with him and he remains “fine”.

Concerns for the synagogue caretaker grew after Kabul fell to the Taliban last weekend at a speed that took Western leaders by surprise.

Jews worldwide expressed their fears for Mr Simentov, calling on social media for an assurance that he was safe.

Taliban officials have insisted that they will respect the rights of Afghanista­n’s minority communitie­s, including its sole Jew. The statement was greeted with widespread scepticism.

Suhail Shaheen, a Taliban spokesman currently in Qatar, told a journalist from Israel’s Kan television network, “I don’t know the last Jew.”

He insisted however that Afghans “don’t need to fear and run away” because, “we don’t harm minorities. There are Sikhs and Hindus in the country, and they have their religious freedom”.

Under the last period of Taliban rule, however, Hindus were forced to wear yellow badges whenever they left the house in a move reminiscen­t of Nazi Germany’s anti-Jewish legislatio­n.

Mr Simentov had previously stated his intention to flee the country by the end of this year’s High Holy Day season, which begins in September. In April of this year he told AFP: “I’m the last, the only Jew in Afghanista­n… It could get worse for me here. I have decided to leave for Israel if the Taliban returns.”

The 62-year-old has been the only Jew in Afghanista­n since his wife and daughters left for Israel and Isaac Levi, another resident of Kabul, died in 2005.

Mr Kahana says he now intends to use the private jet Mr Simentov refused to rescue 15 Afghani women who are in “hiding”, as soon as he can get a country to accept them.

He told the JC, “Israel has refused to accept them - they have only said that I should get the women to Vienna, and then they would consider what to do with them from there.”

He said he was hopeful that America would take the women and that the American Jewish community would guarantee funding to help them.

 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES ?? Going nowhere: Zebulon Simentov at his home in Kabul
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES Going nowhere: Zebulon Simentov at his home in Kabul
 ??  ?? Platitudes: Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen
Platitudes: Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen

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