After Taliban takeover, Afghans in the Gulf worry about home
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[August 30, 2021]
By Abdel Hadi Ramahi and Mohammed Benmansour
AJMAN, United Arab Emirates (Reuters) -
Five months ago, 35-year-old Abadat left Afghanistan with her two
teenage daughters for the Gulf fearing for their safety after a series
of explosions rocked the neighbourhood where they lived.
Now safely in the United Arab Emirates, Abadat fears for her family back
in Afghanistan following the swift take over by the Taliban that
culminated in the capture of Kabul on Aug. 15.
"I’m really scared for them and I wish I can help them and bring them to
me or to any other country that is safe,” she said of her mother and
three sisters, all Kabul residents.
The UAE, who sent troops to Afghanistan during the twenty year war
including to train Afghan forces, says it has facilitated the evacuation
of at least 36,500 people from Afghanistan and that as of this week it
was temporarily housing around 8,500 Afghans.
Abadat now lives in Ajman in the north of the UAE, and is getting
support from the local groups helping people in need.
Abadat said she worries that Afghan women's lives will become
increasingly difficult under the Taliban, an ultra-hardline Sunni
Islamist group which largely barred women from working or studying
during their 1996-2001 rule.
"Women's rights are lost ... Our life is difficult in Afghanistan with
the Taliban in charge, it's very hard," said Abadat, who declined to
disclose her surname for security reasons.
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Daughters of Abadat, 35, a woman from Afghanistan, look on at their
home in Ajman, United Arab Emirates, August 29, 2021. REUTERS/Abdel
Hadi Ramahi
Since capturing Kabul on Aug. 15, the Taliban have
shown a more moderate face and said they will respect women's rights
this time round, but these statements have done little to reassure
Abadat.
"I am frightened and tense. It's not safe to live in that country,"
she said, adding that the country was not safe even before the
Taliban took over.
In neighbouring Saudi Arabia, Afghan Khalid Abdulrasheed told
Reuters he prays for peace in his country and that all those who
recently fled will be able to return safely.
Others hope that a looming economic crisis caused by the Taliban
takeover can be staved off.
"We want a government to be formed. The Taliban are also our
brothers... We want to have a government so that in future
everything gets back to normal," Afghan Sheren Agha said in Riyadh.
(Benmansour reporter from Riyadh, writing by Alexander Cornwell;
Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
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