An ex-army interpreter has made a desperate plea for the US army to rescue his sister who became stranded in Afghanistan following the Taliban’s take over.
Hamidullah Ehsan, who now lives in Modesto, California, with his wife and two children, said he wants the US government ‘to ask her to come to the airport’.
He managed to get his mother and two siblings out of Afghanistan two weeks before the Taliban forces marched into Kabul earlier this month.
An ex-army interpreter has made a desperate plea for the US army to rescue his sister who became stranded in Afghanistan following the Taliban’s take over (file image)
They are now registered with the United Nations refugee agency in neighboring Tajikistan.
Ehsan, who translated for multiple army units in Kandahar from 2008 to 2012 during the 20-year war against the Taliban, fears reprisals from the militants.
One of his sisters is still in Kabul with her husband and infant child. Ehsan has put her name on an evacuation list and is prepared to do whatever it takes to get her out.
‘All I want from the U.S.
government is to call her and ask her to come to the airport. I’m ready to pay her tickets back here,’ he said. ‘All I want is for her to be safe.’
‘They’re asking for interpreters, asking for people that are in the military, asking for all those people and they’re going to kill them,’ he said, citing videos online showing what he said were militants going door-to-door.
Ehsan lives in America after securing a Special Immigrant Visa, designed for people who worked with the U.S.
military, in 2015.
Thousands of desperate Afghans and foreigners have crowded the airport in the capital Kabul, where U.S. and Western military forces are keeping open a last avenue of escape.
Ehsan is most concerned for the women like his sister who remain in the country under new Taliban rule.
Hamidullah Ehsan, who now lives in Modesto, California, with his wife and two children, said he wants the US government ‘to ask her to come to the airport’ (file image)
He believes a return to the harsh version of Islamic law the Taliban enforced while in power from 1996 to 2001 will be disastrous for women’s rights.
The Taliban barred girls from school, kept women from working and forced them to cover their faces and be accompanied by a male relative outside their homes.
‘There was a lot of progress that happened back in Afghanistan but now everything will be zero,’ Ehsan said.
‘What are they doing to do, stay at home?
Nothing. No school. No universities. No talking. Just covering themselves up.’
In their first news conference after taking Kabul, the Taliban said women would be allowed to work and study ‘within the framework of Islam.’
Ehsan vehemently disagrees, saying the Taliban are the same as before.
‘They’ve never been changed,’ he said.
‘I cannot compare them to any human being on the planet. They’re more dangerous than anyone you think of.’
<div class="art-ins mol-factbox news" data-version="2" id="mol-0b301520-04f2-11ec-b922-65862ae2f038" website army interpreter makes plea to rescue sister from Afghanistan
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