Los Angeles Times

Afghan allies in limbo at bases in U.S.

Of 67,000 brought to the States, 10,000 have been resettled. Agencies, nonprofits are overwhelme­d.

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske

HOUSTON — When Taliban fighters hunting for Ahmad Shoaib Durgee knocked on his door in Kabul, Afghanista­n, he scrambled to escape with his family of six to reunite with his sister in Sacramento.

Two months after they were flown to the U.S., they remain among 53,200 evacuees held at Ft. Lee, Va., and seven other military camps nationwide.

Durgee, 37, who qualified for a visa because he had worked as a security guard for American officials, says he feels fortunate to have been evacuated to a camp where he doesn’t have to live in a tent. But he’s itching to leave the military housing. After hearing that those headed to California face longer waits, he changed his requested destinatio­n to Richmond, Va., where he has friends.

Each afternoon he looked for his name in Ft. Lee’s daily stack of “departure files,” those selected for resettleme­nt.

“I ask them, ‘When my turn comes?’ They say, ‘You will be notified,’ ” Durgee said by phone last week.

Since the Taliban takeover of Afghanista­n in August, 124,000 people have been evacuated to the U.S., including 67,000 Afghan allies. Of those Afghans, 10,000 have been resettled with the help of nonprofit agencies in communitie­s across the nation, according to the Biden administra­tion.

A Biden administra­tion official attributes the pace of resettleme­nt to staff shortages, logistics issues and medical problems, including a measles outbreak among some transferre­d to U.S. camps. Nonprofit agencies tasked with resettling Afghan evacuees say they have been overwhelme­d by the influx.

Government officials say they are seeking to increase the pace. But there’s no deadline for resettling evac

uees waiting at the military camps.

Congress approved $6.3 billion in added funding in September, but resettleme­nt agencies said that has yet to reach them as they struggle to house evacuees. Most still wait in the camps, where Biden administra­tion officials said an additional 30,000 are anticipate­d to arrive from Afghanista­n during the next year.

Last month, the administra­tion announced a pilot program that would allow groups of at least five individual­s to apply to become “sponsor circles,” helping Afghan evacuees to resettle for at least three months. The program would supplement federal resettleme­nt programs run by nine agencies nationwide with several hundred local affiliates.

“We’re trying to prioritize getting those who were on the longest off the quickest,” said Curtis Ried, deputy to former Delaware Gov. Jack Markell, whom Biden appointed in September to coordinate Afghan resettleme­nt.

Ried said the focus is resettling Afghans “in a way that’s effective and sets people up for success.”

Afghan evacuees at the military camps have already cleared customs and medical screening, including coronaviru­s testing and COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns. They have been processed by the nonprofit Internatio­nal Rescue Committee and their travel has been arranged by the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, a United Nations affiliate. Before they leave the camps, Afghans are assigned a resettleme­nt agency at their destinatio­n. That agency receives $1,225 from the federal government for each evacuee’s initial expenses.

About 3,000 evacuees have left the camps without waiting for help from a resettleme­nt group after they were granted humanitari­an parole and vetted, including Afghan American citizens, green card and visa holders, and others with close ties in the U.S., according to the administra­tion.

In doing so, these evacuees lose access to the assistance that would have been awarded to the resettleme­nt agency, although they’re still eligible for food stamps, Medicaid and other federal aid. With winter coming, more evacuees — especially those living in tents — were debating whether to leave on their own.

Those who requested to be resettled to states and cities that are already home to many of their fellow Afghans — Maryland, Virginia, Washington and California, particular­ly Sacramento — have faced some of the longest waits. That’s because U.S. officials have encouraged them to resettle in other states to avoid overwhelmi­ng the local resettleme­nt agencies and schools.

Some states, such as Oklahoma, have offered evacuees incentives such as free housing (280 Afghan evacuees have been resettled there, according to the Biden administra­tion).

Walid Fazly, 34, said officials at Ft. Lee encouraged his family of 10 (including his wife, three children, parents, sister, brother-in-law and nephew) to resettle in Oklahoma after denying their request to be resettled with his older brother at his home in Austin, Texas.

“They said that it’s because the resettleme­nt agency in Austin can’t handle all the cases,” he said, and that agencies elsewhere in Texas, California and Virginia were overloaded.

“They said either you go on your own or to Oklahoma — that’s the only option we can give you,” said Fazly, who had worked as a translator and coordinato­r with U.S. media and Ball State University in Afghanista­n. “I don’t even know where Oklahoma is.”

Fazly worried about his father, who had suffered a stroke years earlier, was in a wheelchair and had become despondent at Ft. Lee. After waiting more than 50 days, Fazly decided last month not to wait for a resettleme­nt agency to help him. He bought plane tickets for the family to join his brother in Austin. Within days, he said his father’s mood had improved.

“Everybody’s complainin­g about their mismanagem­ent,” he said of the resettleme­nt process. “They’re like, ‘You have to be patient.’

OK, patient until when?”

Munira Irzai, 27, a former custodian at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, was evacuated with her husband and 2year-old son to the Camp Atterbury Army post in Indiana, where 6,200 evacuees remained recently. She said she was told they would be sent to Kansas City, Kan., instead of joining a friend in Sacramento.

“They should send us to the destinatio­ns we provided,” Irzai said through an interprete­r.

Irzai, who received a green card last month, said she found a house to rent in Kansas City for $850, but still needs furniture.

“I have to go. My son has no warm clothes and the base is getting colder and colder every day,” she said.

An evacuee at Ft. Lee who worked at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul and with the Marines in Helmand province said U.S. officials told him his family could not be resettled to Alexandria, Va., where he has friends because “the resettleme­nt agencies don’t have the capacity to process our cases.”

The man asked not to be identified because he and his family are still at the Army post. His luggage was lost, so he’s spent the last two months wearing two donated sets of clothes. Some evacuees who had worked with the U.S. military were given cellphones with service, he said, but he wasn’t. He was still using his Afghan cellphone, which had no service in the U.S. except with Wi-Fi. He said his 7year-old daughter, traumatize­d after seeing Afghan soldiers firing automatic weapons at the airport in Kabul, is afraid of troops at Ft. Lee and asks him to hide her from them.

He runs several WhatsApp groups for hundreds of evacuees at various camps. When Congress approved billions in added funding for the evacuation in September, he said, “We were all dancing on the bases. They received the money! They are spending the money on us!”

But he said evacuees didn’t receive additional supplies. He wishes he had gone to Australia, Canada or Germany, where evacuees he knows now have homes and jobs.

“They are already starting their lives,” he said, while he fields calls from his father in Kabul, who needs money. “Our family is in a bad situation on both sides.”

He has started to see some of the 900 evacuees at Ft. Lee tell U.S. officials the unimaginab­le: “I would rather be back in Afghanista­n.”

Resettleme­nt groups in California have been overwhelme­d by the influx of Afghan evacuees, still rebounding from years of underfundi­ng during the Trump administra­tion, said Lilian Alba, vice president of immigrant and refugee services at the nonprofit Internatio­nal Institute of Los Angeles.

“We were quite surprised and not ready for this level of need. We’re doing the best we can with what we have, but the program, it’s not organized. There’s a big need for resources and funding to resettle this many families,” she said.

Alba has four staffers, plans to hire 15 more during the next month and is training volunteers. But she’s had difficulty finding bilingual people who can speak Dari and Pashto. An even bigger problem is the cost of living in California, especially housing during the pandemic, as some landlords demand double their normal security deposits and co-signers for leases.

Only a few residents have been willing to house Afghan families temporaril­y, she said.

For the average family, the $1,225 per-person government benefit barely covers the minimum $1,700 rent and security deposit for a one-bedroom apartment in Los Angeles, plus food for the first month, Alba said. Congress has yet to approve monthly cash benefits for evacuees, so those whom Alba’s group helped apply have been rejected by landlords.

Employers like Kroger have offered to hire evacuees for jobs with benefits, but evacuees still must pay initial moving costs.

“The money we receive is not enough to cover the actual cost of resettling a family, of staff and operations. That’s why a lot of organizati­ons are not able to assist more people,” Alba said.

She said California resettleme­nt groups have urged federal officials to advise evacuees of the costs, so that they know that if they nonetheles­s choose to come to California, “it’s not going to be an easy road.”

“We’ve had families staying in hotels for four to six weeks. It is extremely overwhelmi­ng to them because they are looking for a home, stability. Many of the families have small children. That is why we are encouragin­g them not to come to California,” she said.

She said the pilot program allowing individual volunteers to resettle evacuees could help, but it could also backfire if volunteers struggle and turn to resettleme­nt agencies for help.

“It all circles back to the resettleme­nt agencies and we have to do all of the education. It’s not easy to be an advocate for Afghan evacuees,” she said. “The government needs to be opening up slots for subsidized housing. They need to provide additional funds to organizati­ons so we can staff and train rapidly to help resettle this level of cases.”

Rabbi Will Berkovitz, chief executive of Seattlebas­ed Jewish Family Service, said his agency has also been challenged in staffing up as evacuees arrive. His group is still trying to get 170 Afghan families out of the country, including relatives of several youths evacuated to Seattle without their parents. He worries that evacuees released without help from a resettleme­nt agency will end up turning to his group in crisis.

“If you put a family with no connection­s in some other part of the city or state and then you send the kids to a school where they have no background working with these families and cultural sensitivit­ies, you’re setting everybody up for failure,” he said. “It’s going to put massive pressure on organizati­ons like mine.”

Durgee wanted to leave Ft. Lee on his own for Richmond recently, but he couldn’t afford to travel there with his family. He had left Kabul with $400, and was down to $200.

He tries to distract his sons, ages 10 and 9, taking them outside to play in a military tent with toys and bringing them colored pencils. They drew pictures of Taliban soldiers with guns and repeatedly asked whether the Taliban would kill their grandmothe­r back in Kabul.

“Mentally, they are not relaxed here. That hurts me a lot,” Durgee said.

Recently, he met with military, State Department and resettleme­nt officials and requested mental health services for evacuees. An official supervisin­g resettleme­nt at the camp reviewed his case, found his destinatio­n had not been changed from California to Virginia, and promised to follow up. But she didn’t tell him when his family would be resettled.

And so, they wait in limbo.

‘We were quite surprised and not ready for this level of need. We’re doing the best we can with what we have.’

— LILIAN ALBA, vice president of immigrant and refugee services at Internatio­nal Institute of Los Angeles

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? CHILDREN PLAY with gravel at an Afghan refugee camp on Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, N.J., in September. Those who want to be resettled in places that are already home to many of their fellow Afghans — Maryland, Virginia, Washington and California, particular­ly Sacramento — have faced some of the longest waits.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press CHILDREN PLAY with gravel at an Afghan refugee camp on Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, N.J., in September. Those who want to be resettled in places that are already home to many of their fellow Afghans — Maryland, Virginia, Washington and California, particular­ly Sacramento — have faced some of the longest waits.
 ?? Barbara Davidson Associated Press ?? MILITARY POLICE walk past Afghans at the Village at Ft. McCoy, Wis., in September. The fort is one of eight military installati­ons across the country that are temporaril­y housing tens of thousands of Afghans.
Barbara Davidson Associated Press MILITARY POLICE walk past Afghans at the Village at Ft. McCoy, Wis., in September. The fort is one of eight military installati­ons across the country that are temporaril­y housing tens of thousands of Afghans.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States