Southern California students and families stranded in Afghanistan
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[August 26, 2021]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Several dozen
schoolchildren and adult relatives, all Afghan refugees newly resettled
in California, ended up stranded in Afghanistan after traveling back to
their homeland over the summer to visit loved ones, San Diego-area
school officials said on Wednesday.
Six families consisting of about 16 adults and 24 students from the
Cajon Valley Union School District in the San Diego suburb of El Cajon
were among thousands clamoring to leave Afghanistan amid the Taliban
takeover as U.S. troops began pulling out, according to district
officials.
Michael Serban, head of the district's Family & Community Engagement
(FACE) program for immigrant students, said one of the six stranded
families - comprising four students, a 2-year-old child and two adults -
had since made it out and returned safely to El Cajon.
The fate of the five other families was not immediately known, he said.
Serban and district spokesman Howard Shen said school officials were
working with two members of California's U.S. congressional delegation -
Representative Darrell Issa and Senator Alex Padilla - to contact the
missing families and get them back to the United States.
"We don’t have any operational details," Serban told Reuters. "For the
safety of the families, they just let us know they're working on it."
In 10 days since the Taliban took control of Afghanistan, the United
States and its allies have mounted one of the biggest air evacuations
ever, bringing out more than 88,000 people. The operation is due to end
next Tuesday, but is expected to shift its focus in the final two days
to military personnel from civilians.
Cajon Valley school officials became aware of their students' plight
when one family visiting Afghanistan contacted a FACE community liaison
officer on Aug. 16 to report difficulties it faced making it back to
California in time for the first day of classes on Aug. 17.
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A U.S. Air Force Airman guides qualified evacuees aboard a U.S. Air
Force C-17 Globemaster III at Hamid Karzai International Airport (HKIA),
Afghanistan, August 24, 2021. U.S. Air Force/Senior Airman Taylor
Crul/Handout via REUTERS
As the situation in Kabul deteriorated, school
district officials learned through local contacts and social media
that five more families were likewise stuck in Afghanistan, most in
the Afghan capital, and needed help getting out, Serban said.
All six families are part of a larger community of refugees from
Afghanistan who settled in El Cajon in recent years, including a few
hundred young Afghan immigrants among the 17,000 students enrolled
in Cajon Valley schools, Serban said.
A large portion of the school district's student body also consists
of immigrants from Iraq, Syria and various Latin American countries
- a major factor in the establishment of the district's FACE
program, he said.
Serban said it was not unusual for members of those communities,
including Afghan immigrants, to venture back to their homelands
"when they feel it's safe to go" for summer vacations with family
still living in their native countries.
School officials worry that an untold number of other vacationing
Afghan-American immigrants may have found themselves stranded in
Kabul without a school-based community liaison or anyone else they
feel they can trust in the United States to reach out to for help.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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