India

Afghans adrift on US ‘lily pad’ in Kosovo

Two weeks after the Taliban reclaimed Kabul in 2021, diplomats and US soldiers in Kosovo welcomed with open arms and newly built accommodations Afghans who had been evacuated because of their work with the United States and allied governments.
Camp Liya, constructed alongside the US Army base Camp Bondsteel, would briefly be their home — a “lily pad,” they were told — while Washington arranged their resettlement in the United States or a third country.
“We are honored to be able to help Afghan refugees who worked for NATO,” Kosovan Prime Miner Albin Kurti said on August 29, 2021, greeting the first arrivals at the airport. “They left their homes and their country in desperation. But we will do everything to make sure that they will be safe, secure here.”
John Kir, the Pentagon spokesman at the time, said the agreement signed with Kosovo pledged the US to relocate Afghans that are housed at in the camp “to the United States or a third country within 365 days.”
Liya lingers on
Fast-forward — or for the residents, slow-crawl forward — to today. The plan for Camp Liya to be dismantled within a year has fallen the wayside. Though many hundreds of Afghans did pass through quickly, receiving US visas or offers to live in another country, others are stuck there after receiving either a negative decision from US authorities or no decision at all.
“Some people are depressed; some people have psychological problems,” an Afghan man who had been evacuated told DW, asking that he not be identified because of security risks. “They told us that we would be here for a couple of months, but we are here for almost one year. After eight months they said: ‘You are not eligible to go to America.’ We ask them what’s the reason. They didn’t tell us.”
The long-term residents may have been told that they were guests initially, but this man said now it felt like a prison. He said residents were not allowed to leave the base unless they give up their right to come back. They cannot work to earn money to send back to their families, who in many cases were not allowed to be evacuated with them, so he is worried his children are going hungry.
After reflecting, he said the information vacuum made the situation feel worse than prison.
“A prisoner can have access to his case, and he can ask about his case, why he is here, for how long he will be in detention,” the man said. “If we ask that, they don’t give us any reason why we are in this camp and for how long.”
Treatment ‘just shocking’
Earlier this summer exasperation on the base boiled over and evacuees staged a protest, holding signs signs saying “women and children are suffering” and “we want justice.”
Most of the people whose visa requests have been rejected have no lawyers to press their cases with the US government. One who does is former Afghan intelligence chief Mohammad Arif Sarwari. He was among the first Afghans to coordinate with US forces when they invaded Afghanan after 9/11.
Back then Julie Sirrs was a defense intelligence analyst with the US Department of Defense, and became acquainted with Sarwari while working in Afghanan. Later in her career, she became an attorney. When she learned that his life was in danger with the return of the Taliban last year, Sirrs decided she’d repay Sarwari his assance of decades ago and represent him as he sought resettlement in the United States.
“He protected my life and that of many other Americans,” Sirrs told DW. “He was the primary contact for the CIA team that went in immediately post-9/11. I don’t think there is any individual in Afghanan who did more than Mr. Sarwari did to help the United States.”
Sirrs is puzzled that her client has been rejected for a US visa and frustrated that she is given very little information about his case.
“I think the treatment is highly improper, especially in cases like my client’s, who provided tremendous assance at great risk to his life,” she said.
“I understand there are others in a similar position to him in the camp and it’s just shocking to me, the very poor treatment they’ve been getting through this process. No one disputes the need for appropriate vetting. But in some cases, for those individuals who are still in the camp, it seems to be a process that has gone wrong in some way.”
Asked what might be their fate, State Department Spokesman Ned Price had little to share. “There is a small number [of evacuees] still there who are undergoing additional vetting,” he said on August 16. “We’ve been able to clear a number of them already. But, again, each vetting process is done on a case–case basis, and that’s ongoing for those who remain there.”
US strikeout stigma
Seeking a third country for evacuated Afghans becomes infinitely more difficult once US officials have determined that they are not eligible to live in the United States.
“The first thing other countries do tend to assume is that there may be some security issue,” Sirrs said, adding that she doesn’t believe there’s any such concern with Sarwari. He recently was able to negotiate a departure from Camp Liya to another location to await a resettlement offer, but, she said, no country has offered to take him in.
Going back to Afghanan would mean certain death for Sarwari, she said, as it would for many others at Camp Liya.
That leaves the problem in Kosovo’s lap. One year after he promised the new arrivals safety and security, Kosovo’s Prime Miner Kurti, visiting Brussels, acknowledged his government had agreed to let the US blow its deadline of August 29, 2022 to have Camp Liya disbanded. He did not respond directly to this reporter’s question of whether the people who remain in Camp Liya could be resettled within Kosovo.
“It’s a humanitarian duty to help refugees who had to flee,” Kurti said. “On the other hand, it is duty toward our allies and partners and friends — first of all the United States — to help when they are in need. And we will continue to do so.”
Continuing the status quo is just the opposite of what Camp Liya’s left-behind inhabitants want.

Related Articles

Back to top button