Exclusive-Stranded at Tajik sanatorium, pregnant Afghan pilot fears for
unborn baby
Send a link to a friend
[October 06, 2021]
By Phil Stewart
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - She didn't forget
the prenatal vitamins - that was one of the few things this U.S.-trained
Afghan pilot could grab from her Kabul airport office before she left
the country aboard an Air Force plane during the Taliban takeover.
But after fleeing for her life and that of her unborn child in August,
the 29-year-old says she can't even get an ultrasound or visit a
hospital.
Instead, she fears her son could soon be born into a strange kind of
captivity in rural Tajikistan, alongside more than 140 other Afghan
military personnel, almost all of them men, who flew across
Afghanistan's northern border together and are now being held at a
sanatorium in the mountains.
"I am really, really worried about my baby," said the Air Force captain,
whose situation was first reported by Reuters in September, in her first
comments to a reporter.
She was speaking on a phone kept hidden from guards, after Tajik
authorities took the Afghans' identification documents and phones away.
She asked to remain anonymous over fears for her family in Afghanistan.
Despite her mid-November due date, Tajik authorities have dismissed her
request to be moved closer to a hospital that's an hour or more away,
she said.
"They say: 'No. When your delivery time comes we will take you to the
hospital and bring you back here'," she said.
Her group has been detained in Tajikistan for nearly two months, hoping
the United States will eventually fly them out of the country to be
processed for refugee status in America. But for reasons that are not
clear, that has not yet happened.
They say Tajik authorities keep telling them to wait.
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told a congressional hearing last week he
was concerned about the pilots in Tajikistan and would work with the
State Department to "see if we can move this forward."
Republican Congressman Austin Scott, who raised the case of the pregnant
pilot during the hearing, expressed frustration with the State
Department's handling of her case.
He said the department told his office the Tajik government was "very
aware of the pregnant pilot's condition" and that anyone needing
emergency medical services would be taken to a local medical facility.
"Aside from that, they have been zero help with any of this," Scott told
Reuters.
The State Department said that it was "coordinating with the government
of Tajikistan" on the matter but declined to explain the delay or why
the pilots are being detained.
Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said the U.S. Defense and State
departments were working closely together "as we pursue appropriate
options for these pilots."
"We believe we owe it to these brave individuals and their families to
do what we can to help them relocate," Kirby told Reuters.
A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said it was
complicated to get access to the Afghans at the sanatorium.
[to top of second column]
|
A pregnant U.S.-trained Afghan pilot, who is being held at a
sanatorium and who asked that her face and name be concealed due to
security concerns, poses for a photo in Tajikistan October 5, 2021.
Picture taken October 5, 2021. Handout via REUTERS
Tajikistan's healthcare ministry declined to answer
specific questions from Reuters about the situation or the delay,
but said the sanatorium was staffed with medical workers.
BIGGEST TARGETS
U.S.-trained, English-speaking Afghan pilots were among the
Taliban's biggest targets during the war.
The Afghan air force personnel in Tajikistan are the last major
group of such personnel abroad still believed to be in limbo after
dozens of advanced aircraft were flown across the Afghan border to
that country and to Uzbekistan in the final moments of the war.
Earlier in September, a U.S.-brokered deal allowed a larger group of
Afghan pilots and other military personnel to be flown out of
Uzbekistan https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/exclusive-theyll-kill-us-afghan-pilots-held-uzbek-camp-fear-deadly-homecoming-2021-09-03.
Luckily, the pregnant Afghan pilot's husband - who worked at the
U.S.-backed government in Kabul - evacuated with her. But they feel
trapped.
She said she feared medical personnel at the sanatorium, located
outside the capital, Dushanbe, were not qualified to deal with
pregnancies.
"We are like prisoners here. Not even like refugees, not even like
immigrants. We have no legal documents or way to buy something for
ourselves," she said,
Reuters has learned that U.S. officials have started collecting
biometric information to confirm the identities of members of the
group, in a sign that help could be on the way. A similar effort in
Uzbekistan preceded those pilots' transfer.
But people close to the pilots say the United States still hasn't
collected biometric data on about a third of the group.
The pregnant pilot sounded relieved to report that an international
organization this week dropped off winter clothes for the Afghans at
the sanatorium, as well as lots of supplies for her baby, including
warm clothes.
But that also meant she was bracing for the idea of a longer stay in
Tajikistan.
"They are providing clothes and lots of things, so it means we are
going to stay here," she said, adding in a defeated tone: "I don't
know about the future."
(Reporting by Phil Stewart; Editing by Mary Milliken and Sonya
Hepinstall)
[© 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. |