From bitcoin dreamer to fugitive, fleeing the Taliban for Turkey
Send a link to a friend
[August 25, 2021]
By Ali Kucukgocmen
TATVAN, Turkey (Reuters) - Muhammad Ali
said he dreamt of building a cryptocurrency business before the Taliban
began its sweep through Afghanistan, forcing him into a daunting journey
west through Iran and Turkey, evading border guards and security
searches as he went.
The Taliban victory in Afghanistan has raised concern in Turkey, a
staging post for many migrants trying to reach Europe and already home
to nearly 4 million Syrians, of a new influx of refugees. It has ramped
up security on its border with Iran - but some Afghans are still
getting through.
Sheltering in a drainage tunnel outside the Tatvan district of Turkey's
eastern Bitlis province, Ali, a young man in his 20s from Afghanistan's
Khost province, said he was waiting for transport west and wanted to go
on to Europe. Around 50 others were sheltering with him.
Ali said he had studied computer science and taught web and graphic
design in Afghanistan. He said he had a YouTube channel where he posted
videos on topics including how to make money online.
"I was planning a bitcoin or ethereum mining business... Suddenly
everything changed and the Taliban took over all of Afghanistan," he
said.
"There is no internet. If there is no internet, I cannot do my job
there. If we had smart phones that had a camera, the Taliban wouldn't
allow it."
After trekking for weeks through Iran, migrants who enter Turkey's
eastern province of Van make their way by foot, bus or boat to the town
of Tatvan on the western shores of Lake Van.
On their way they try to evade police checkpoints, raids on their
hideouts and coast guard vessels which patrol the huge lake, where a
boat carrying around 60 migrants sank last year, killing them all.
[to top of second column]
|
Muhammad Ali, an Afghan migrant from Khost who planned to found his
own cryptocurrency mining business, center, and the other migrants
hide from security forces after crossing illegally into Turkey from
Iran, near Tatvan in Bitlis province, Turkey August 23, 2021.
REUTERS/Murad Sezer
Wais Muhammad Shehrzad, 30, said he left Afghanistan
a month ago, paying $1,000 to traffickers and walking up to 50 hours
at a time with little sustenance on the way.
"Our feet are blistered, we have no clothes, no food," he said,
taking off his shoes to show a bruised ankle, and telling others in
the group to sit down to avoid being seen.
Shehrzad said he was from Kabul and had worked as a shoe maker and
previously as an English teacher. He wanted to get to Istanbul, find
work, and send money back to his family.
In recent weeks Turkish police have detained thousands of Afghan
migrants among an estimated 300,000 in the country. Those caught in
Bitlis are sent to a repatriation centre in Van, although Afghans
are currently not sent back to their country because of the turmoil
there.
A day after he spoke to Reuters, Ali sent a text message. "We are
arrested by police," it said.
(Additional reporting by Parniyan Zemaryalai in London; Editing by
Dominic Evans and Nick Tattersall)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |