Afghan refugee protesting in UAE over uncertain future

Author: AFP/ Web Desk

Afghan refugee protesting in UAE over uncertain future. Afghan refugees and migrants, since being evacuated living in limbo at a United Arab Emirates (UAE) facility for nearly a year. They held protests this week over what they say is a slow and opaque resettlement process.

Hundreds of Afghans carried banners and shouted for freedom. Two Afghans in the facility told Reuters, estimating that thousands were awaiting resettlement to the United States or other countries.

Pictures and videos showed children, women and men protesting inside the facility in Abu Dhabi, known as Emirates Humanitarian City. They recorded their protest with temperatures in the Gulf Arab state reaching 38 Celsius (100 Fahrenheit).

One boy held a small banner that read: “One year is enough!”

Men and children chanting “we want justice” were seen in one video wearing white blindfolds inscribed with the word “freedom”.

The UAE says it is commitment to ensure Afghan evacuees can live in safety, security, and dignity.

“Nearly one year, we have been here in detention and the camp is like a modern prison. No one is allow to go out, they don’t know when (we) will be the settlers permanently to any country,”

A UAE official acknowledged there were frustrations. They said that Abu Dhabi was working with the US Embassy to resettle the Afghans in the United States or elsewhere.

Resettlement was taking longer than Abu Dhabi wanted, the official said.

A State Department spokesperson said Washington was working to identify Afghans who may qualify for resettlement in the United States. And “will be relentless in this effort” while “ensuring standard screening and vetting measures”.

More than 10,000 Afghans relocated from the Abu Dhabi facility to the United States. Washington was cooperating with the UAE and other countries to find “resettlement options” for those ineligible for US relocation, the spokesperson said.

Protests erupted at the facility in February after the resettlement process appeared to have stalled, prompting a visit by a US State Department official who said all Afghans there would be resettled by August.

The process resumed shortly after the visit. At the time, there were an estimated 12,000 Afghans at the facility in Abu Dhabi and another site nearby.

In August last year, Afghanistan’s Taliban ousted a US-backed government as US-led foreign troops were withdrawing.

Since then, the United States has taken in more than 85,000 Afghans, many processed in the Middle East and Europe.

Complicated process

The two Afghans who spoke to Reuters said the mental health of those in the tightly controlled facility was deteriorating due to the uncertainty. Both said they did not know when they would be resettle.

The UAE official said people in the facility received “high-quality housing, sanitation, health, clinical, counselling, education and food services to ensure their welfare”.

#AfghanEvac, a coalition of volunteer groups advocating on behalf of Afghans to the US government, wrote on Twitter after protests broke out that the process had not stalled and those in the UAE facility would be resettled in the United States or elsewhere.

Officials in the UAE said it offered to temporarily host thousands of Afghans evacuated on behalf of the United States. The other Western nations after Afghanistan’s Western-backed government collapsed and the Taliban took over.

Some of those at the Abu Dhabi facility arrived on military flights from Kabul as US forces withdrew. Others came later on chartered flights.

Some do not have any identity documents and need to go through a vetting process before they can be resettled. While some have no ties to the United States or any other country that would qualify them for resettlement.

The UAE, like other Gulf states, typically does not accept refugees.

US officials said, no one is to force to return to Afghanistan. Though some Afghans in the UAE returned voluntarily after months of waiting.

Among Afghans who have been held in the UAE, advocates say, are those who worked with the US government, military, other coalition partners and foreign aid groups during the war.

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