U.S. considers visas for vulnerable Afghan women after military exit
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[July 08, 2021]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Biden
administration is considering offering an expedited visa path for
vulnerable Afghans including women politicians, journalists, and
activists who may become targets of the Taliban, U.S. officials say.
Rights groups have been asking the State Department and White House to
add up to 2,000 visas specifically for vulnerable women and women's
advocates to a developing policy plan to evacuate thousands Afghans
after the U.S. military pullout this month. The current plan https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-afghanistan-visas-idAFKCN2DR2KG
includes translators who worked with foreign forces.
One of the officials said the administration is looking not only at
women who are under threat, but also men and minorities in high-risk
professions.
Women who made gains during the two-decade U.S. occupation, and their
supporters and advocates, should be part of any expedited list, rights
groups have argued to the White House and State Department.
"Lives are at risk,” said Teresa Casale, advocacy director for Mina’s
List, which advocates for women’s representation in governments around
the world. "Women leaders are being actively targeted and killed by
Taliban forces. They receive threats against their lives and safety
every day."
The group and others are recommending these visas be added to an
expedited activation process for Afghan people most at risk, by creating
a fast track program in State Department, and that U.S. officials
actively pursue diplomacy to other countries as well to secure them.
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Women walk at a street in Kabul, Afghanistan February 4,
2021.REUTERS/Omar Sobhani
The White House declined to comment on the push to
secure more visas for Afghan women's rights advocates. President Joe
Biden will speak Thursday afternoon about the U.S. military's
withdrawal, and is expected to mention women's rights.
Women police officers, media workers, judges and medical workers
have been assassinated in Afghanistan as foreign military left the
country.
Women who appear on television and radio faced particular threats,
Human Rights Watch wrote in April. "Female reporters may be targeted
not only for issues they cover but also for challenging perceived
social norms prohibiting women from being in a public role and
working outside the home."
Under the Taliban, women were barred from education or work,
required to fully cover their bodies, and could not leave home
without a male relative. "Moral offenses" were punished by flogging
and stoning.
(Reporting by Idrees Ali, Heather Timmons, Andrea Shalal; Editing by
Michael Perry)
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