Kabul, June 7, (dpa/GNA) – People who worked for foreign forces in Afghanistan will be safe and should not leave the country as the foreign forces withdraw, assured Taliban forces in a statement on Monday.
“None should currently desert the country,” the statement reads. “The Islamic Emirate will not perturb them.”
Tens of thousands of Afghans have worked with the international forces in the past 20 years as interpreters, security guards, and as helpers in other capacities.
They fear retaliation from the Taliban once the foreign forces have left. Many have applied for special visas to leave the country.
Many countries – including the United States, Germany and Britain – have programmes to resettle their local staff. The applications of around 18,000 Afghans seeking a special immigration visa are currently pending at the US embassy in Kabul, according to embassy data.
Thousands of others have already been resettled to the countries they have worked with.
According to No One Left Behind, a US non-governmental organization, around 300 people who worked as local staff for the US military or their family members have been killed since 2016.
In the past, the insurgents have said Afghans working with the “invaders” are “traitors” or “slaves.”
Now, the insurgent group calls on these Afghans to “show remorse for their past actions” and says they should not engage in such activities in the future.
“We viewed them as our foes when they were directly standing in the ranks of our enemies,” the statement added. “But when they abandon enemy ranks and opt to live as ordinary Afghans in their homeland, they will not face any issues.”
It is questionable whether the local staff will trust these statements.
Twitter users who support the Taliban also routinely express ideas about how the local staff should be dealt with after the troops have withdrawn. Many of those are not in line with Monday’s statement.
They say, among other things, that one can never forgive those who used to work for the foreigners.
GNA