Afghan evacuees in limbo in Qatar camp accuse US of betrayal
Afghan evacuees in limbo in Qatar camp accuse US of betrayal 5 hours ago Yogita Limaye ,South Asia and Afghanistan correspondentand Mahfouz Zubaide For 18 months, Alia has been waiting in a transit camp in Qatar for her promised resettlement to the US.
But now that route appears to have closed for good.
Where she and hundreds of other Afghan evacuees will end up next is unknown.
Going back home to Afghanistan is not an option.
It is too dangerous, Alia says.
And since the US and Israel began a war with Iran, the evacuees are not safe where they are either.
Not by the American people, but by those in government who had promised to take us to safety in America," says Alia, who worked as a lawyer in Afghanistan before the Taliban took over the country in 2021.
Earlier this year, the Trump administration announced it would close the camp by 31 March and that the evacuees would not be taken to the US, plunging hundreds like Alia into fear and uncertainty.
Their anxiety has surged since Qatar started to be hit by Iranian attacks.
CAS is roughly 12 miles (19km) from Al-Udeid US air base, which has been repeatedly struck by Iran.
The emotional situation of children, pregnant women and the elderly is concerning. People wander about the corridors and cry. " They have appealed to US President Donald Trump to make a one-off exception for them due to the volatile situation.
"This group of people are not just random refugees that showed up in Qatar.
They were brought there by the United States government and told that they would be moving to the United States," says Shawn VanDiver, a US military veteran who runs AfghanEvac, a charity that has helped resettled Afghans who aided the US effort.
And because of that connection, they're in danger. "
Then in June, he suspended the entry of Afghan nationals into the US as part of a wider travel ban. The possibility of any exception being granted to the evacuees became virtually impossible after an Afghan man shot and killed a National Guard member and severely injured another in Washington DC in November.
The announcement of the closure of the camp was the final blow.
"I worked honestly and faithfully with the Americans for years," fellow evacuee Latif tells the BBC. He breaks down as he speaks. The elderly man - whose name has also been changed for his safety - worked at a US base in Afghanistan.
The BBC has seen evidence of his employment.
"They never saw any betrayal from me," he said.
"I am under so much stress that it's made me ill. My wife is also unwell. This is not human rights. " Alia says: "Our living situation has felt like a slow death ever since Trump came to power. I am heartbroken and suffering from anxiety. " The evacuees told the BBC that initially the US state department had tried to tell them to return to Afghanistan.
"I worked for 14 years against the Taliban.
How can I go back?"
"The people I helped convict are now in power.
They will seek revenge against me," she says.
But Latif and Alia do not believe the assurances.
The US state department has said it is in talks with third countries to take in the evacuees.
In a statement to the BBC it defended the move, saying it was "not appropriate or humane to keep this group of individuals on the [CAS] platform indefinitely".
"This is not based in fact. The vetting is strong. We were at war there for 20 years, and all these people that served alongside us and their families, they got vetted over and over and over again. "
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