My baby girl is safe. My niece? I just don’t know
Cuddling his baby daughter after arriving in Scotland, Omid Asak knows he and his family are lucky to have escaped the Taliban.
The journalist, who took his family and fled after the militants sent him a written warning after surging into Kabul, knows too that the relatives he left behind may not be so lucky. He tells of a traumatic call to his 16-year-old niece stranded in the capital as the Taliban again curb the rights and education of women. He said: “She told me school is off. She was crying and asking for my help...but I could not help her.”
Asak voices fears for his family trapped in Afghanistan as charities and refugee organisations urge the UK to do more to ease the passage of people attempting to flee the country where hopes of a more moderate Taliban are, according to sources in Kabul, turning to dust.
An Afghan refugee who has settled in Scotland with his young family has told how his teenage niece begged him to help her flee the Taliban but he was unable to help her.
Omid Asak fled from Kabul in August as Taliban fighters closed in on the capital. A newspaper journalist, he had written articles critical of the fundamentalists and had already been warned his life was in danger.
He and his wife Zarifa – along with sons Ahmad Shah, seven, Jebran, five, and one-year-old baby daughter Maryiam – managed to get on a flight to Birmingham. They have since been found accommodation in Irvine, Ayrshire.
Asak, 38, said: “In the last month in Afghanistan the journalists on some famous papers were targeted by the Taliban. I was at risk because they knew me, and I had written a lot of analysis essays against the Taliban and fundamentalism.
“They sent a warning to me so I had to leave – a written warning. For this reason it was necessary for me to leave Afghanistan.”
Asak has five brothers and his mother still living in Afghanistan. One brother was in the army while another was a firefighter. He said: “In all of Afghanistan, of those people who were in the government and especially the military. the targeting is continual.”
Asak fought back tears as he told how, after the family arrived in Britain, he spoke on the phone to his niece.
“She was crying about her future. She is 16. She told me ‘please help me’. She has had to stop going to school – school is off. The Taliban don’t let girls go to school. They have an unknown future. My niece wanted help from me, to come out, but I could not help.”
He said he fears Afghanistan will now return to the dark days that he experienced as a teenager living under the previous Taliban government.
He said: “In the past when the Taliban was in Afghanistan, I was in the sixth class at school. We lost everything. I had a hope to learn and become educated, but my generation, the whole generation, lose their hope.”
Asak now hopes to enrol on a college course to improve his English in the hope of resuming his career in Scotland. Meanwhile, his two sons have started at primary school. He said: “They can speak English. The school gave to me some welcome cards to teach the meaning of these things to them – for example, toilet. So every day I try to show them one or two words.”
He said many Afghans were desperate to come to Scotland. “Lots of people want to come to Scotland,” he said. “It’s a good place to come to.
“It is a very, very bad situation, with the economy and the risk of violence, they are under the direct attack from the Taliban. They don’t want the women and girls to go to university, to go to school. All of the women are at home, like prison.
“They are allowed out, but they don’t let them go to do their job. All of the women who had a job in schools, in offices, health centre, right now they cannot go to their jobs. If they do, they could face violence.”