'More dangerous than anyone:' as Taliban returns, former interpreter on mission to rescue sister from Kabul
Record ID:
1633496
'More dangerous than anyone:' as Taliban returns, former interpreter on mission to rescue sister from Kabul
- Title: 'More dangerous than anyone:' as Taliban returns, former interpreter on mission to rescue sister from Kabul
- Date: 24th August 2021
- Summary: MODESTO, CALIFORNIA, UNITED STATES (AUGUST 18, 2021) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (English) FORMER INTERPRETER FOR U.S. ARMY, HAMIDULLAH EHSAN, SAYING: "Yeah, two weeks before Kabul fell to the Taliban's hands, I evacuated my mom, one of my brothers, and one of my sisters to the neighboring country down there, so at least they should be safe right now." VARIOUS OF PUNCHING BAGS SWINGING FROM CEILING PAN FROM PUNCHING BAGS TO EHSAN WITH BOXING COACH EHSAN IN TRAINING EXERCISE WITH BOXING COACH EHSAN'S FEET ON TRAINING FLOOR (SOUNDBITE) (English) FORMER INTERPRETER FOR U.S. ARMY, HAMIDULLAH EHSAN, SAYING: "The situation was pretty much like normal. And you feel it. Like, there's a big army. Nothing's going to happen in a minute. I was like, it was the right time to evacuate them. But still, then two weeks later, when this collapse things happened, when the governments collapsed all over, I was really shocked. Like in two days, I haven't eaten something for two nights, because what if my mom (had been) in this situation right now?"
- Embargoed: 7th September 2021 11:03
- Keywords: Afghanistan Afghanistan conflict Ehsan Hamidullah Ehsan Modesto Taliban U.S. army interpreters conflict
- Location: MODESTO, CALIFORNIA, UNITED STATES + UNIDENTIFIED LOCATIONS, AFGHANISTAN
- City: MODESTO, CALIFORNIA, UNITED STATES + UNIDENTIFIED LOCATIONS, AFGHANISTAN
- Country: USA
- Topics: Conflicts/War/Peace,United States
- Reuters ID: LVA002ERN26H3
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: EDITOR'S NOTE: EDIT CONTAINS PROFANITY
Former U.S. Army interpreter Hamidullah Ehsan saw what was coming. Two weeks before the Taliban forces marched into Kabul this month, Ehsan got his mother and two of his siblings out of Afghanistan.
They're now registered with the United Nations refugee agency in neighboring Tajikistan.
It's a huge relief for Ehsan, who translated for multiple army units in Kandahar, Afghanistan from 2008 to 2012 during the U.S.'s 20-year war against the Taliban and fears reprisals from the militant group for his work.
Ehsan does not believe the Taliban's assurances that they do not seek revenge, citing videos online showing what he said were militants going door to door knocking on homes.
Reuters interviewed Ehsan, 32, at a boxing and Brazilian jiu-jitsu gym in Modesto, California, where he now lives after securing a Special Immigrant Visa, designed for people who worked with the U.S. military, in 2015.
Meanwhile, Ehsan has one more sister who remains stuck in the now Taliban-controlled capital of Kabul with her husband and infant child.
Ehsan has filed her name on an evacuation list and while he knows it's a long shot, he's prepared to do whatever it takes.
"All I just want from the (U.S.) government is to call her and ask her to come to the airport. I'm ready to pay her tickets back here, I'm ready to take care of her in any financial situation. All I want is for her to be safe from out there," he said.
The airport has been the final frontier for foreign forces in the country. Thousands of desperate Afghans and foreigners have been crowding into Kabul airport in the hope of fleeing Afghanistan's new Taliban rulers. U.S. officials are scrambling to figure out how to extend a looming Aug. 31 deadline to airlift Americans and their allies to safety.
The situation for his sister and other women in Afghanistan is what concerns Ehsan most. He believes a return to a harsh version of Islamic law that the Taliban enforced while in power from 1996 to 2001 will be disastrous for women's rights.
During that rule, girls were barred from school while women could not work and had to cover their faces and be accompanied by a male relative outside their homes.
"There was a lot of progress (that) happened back in Afghanistan but now everything is zero," Ehsan said. "What are they (women) going to do? Stay at home? Nothing. No school. No universities. No talking. Just covering themselves up. It's so disgusting."
In their first press conference after taking Kabul, the Taliban said women would be allowed to work and study "within the framework of Islam".
Ehsan vehemently disagrees with the militants, saying they're the same as before.
"The Taliban, as I told you, they've never been changed. I cannot compare them to the animal. (An) animal is much better than them. I cannot compare them to any human being on the planet. They're more dangerous than anyone you think of," he said.
(Production: Nathan Frandino) - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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