"Safia Noori and Fakhruddin Elham are a young Afghan couple who both served in the Afghan special forces, fighting alongside American troops in Afghanistan. After the fall of Kabul, they fled Taliban persecution in their own country, then escaped to Pakistan, where they lived as refugees with their two small children, waiting for the United States to make good on its promise to bring Afghan allies to this country. Last year, Donald Trump returned to power and broke that promise, closing the doors to resettlement. Around the same time, the Pakistani government stopped renewing the visas of Afghan refugees and began deporting them by the hundreds of thousands."
"The family became fugitives with no legal status, hiding from the police in Islamabad to avoid being sent back to death or misery in Afghanistan, trying to find a way to safety. On March 24, this magazine published my story about Safia and Elham. (I gave them pseudonyms for their own protection, but can safely use their real names now.) That day, an acquaintance who leads an international humanitarian organization, and who had brought the family's plight to the attention of high-level Spanish officials back in January, used my essay to nudge Madrid about the family's request for asylum, and Madrid nudged its embassy in Islamabad, setting in motion the maddening, dreamlike events that followed."
"The next day, on March 25, the Spanish ambassador sent a letter approving the family's travel to Spain for "international protection." The embassy instructed Safia to send copies of plane tickets for Madrid, as well as all-important exit permits from the government of Pakistan, before their visas could be issued."
Safia Noori and Fakhruddin Elham, an Afghan couple who served in Afghan special forces alongside American troops, fled Taliban persecution after the fall of Kabul. They escaped to Pakistan with their two children and waited for the United States to resettle Afghan allies. After Donald Trump returned to power, resettlement promises were broken and doors closed. Around the same time, Pakistan stopped renewing Afghan refugees’ visas and began deporting them in large numbers. The family became fugitives with no legal status, hiding in Islamabad to avoid being sent back to death or misery. Their asylum request gained momentum after humanitarian advocacy and Spanish diplomatic action, leading to approval for travel to Spain for international protection and instructions to provide travel documents and Pakistani exit permits.
#afghan-refugees #statelessness #asylum-and-international-protection #pakistan-deportations #spanish-embassy
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