More than 28,000 Afghans have applied for temporary admission into the United States for humanitarian reasons since shortly before the Taliban recaptured Afghanistan and sparked a chaotic US withdrawal, but only about 100 of them have been approved, according to federal officials.
US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has struggled to keep up with the surge in applications to a little-used programme, known as humanitarian parole, but promises it is ramping up staff to address the growing backlog.
Afghan families in the US and the immigrant groups supporting them say the slow pace of approvals threatens the safety of their loved ones, many of whom fear being targeted by the new Taliban rulers for their ties to the US-led forces in the country.
The US-led NATO forces left the country on August 31, 20 years after deposing the Taliban government in a military invasion in the wake of the September 11 attacks. The Taliban armed group, which waged a decades-long armed rebellion against US forces, retook power in August after the West-backed government of President Ashraf Ghani collapsed.
Top Taliban leaders have pledged to offer amnesty to people who worked for the previous government, but some Afghans fear that they may still be targeted by the lower-level Taliban fighters.
“We’re worried for their lives,” says Safi, a Massachusetts resident whose family is sponsoring 21 relatives seeking humanitarian parole. “Sometimes, I think there will be a day when I wake up and receive a call saying that they’re no more.”
The 38-year-old US permanent resident, who asked that her last name not be used for fear of retribution against her relatives, is hoping to bring over her sister, uncle and their families. She says the families have been in hiding and their house was destroyed in a recent bombing because her uncle had been a prominent local official before the Taliban took over.
The slow pace of approvals is frustrating because families have already paid hundreds if not thousands of dollars in processing fees, says Chiara St Pierre, a lawyer at the International Institute of New England in Lowell, Massachusetts, a refugee resettlement agency assisting Safi’s family.
Each parole application comes with a $575 filing charge, meaning USCIS, which is primarily fee-funded, is sitting on some $11.5m from Afghans in the last few months alone, she and other advocates complain.
“People are desperate to get their families out,” said St Pierre, whose nonprofit has filed more than 50 parole applications for Afghan nationals. “Do we not owe a duty to the people left behind, especially when they are following our immigration laws and using the options they have?”
Victoria Palmer, a USCIS spokeswoman, said the agency has trained 44 additional staff to help address the application surge. As of mid-October, the agency had only six staffers detailed to the programme.
Of the more than 100 approved as of July 1, some are still in Afghanistan and some have made it to third countries, she said, declining to provide details. The programme typically receives fewer than 2,000 requests annually from all nationalities, of which the USCIS approves an average of about 500, according to Palmer.
Barriers remain
Part of the challenge is that humanitarian parole requires an in-person interview, meaning those in Afghanistan need to travel to another county with an operating US embassy or consulate after they have cleared the initial screening. US officials warn it could then take months longer, and there is no guarantee parole will be granted, even after the interview.
Humanitarian parole does not provide a path to lawful permanent residence or confer US immigration status. It is meant for foreigners who are unable to go through the asylum or other traditional visa processes, but who need to leave their country urgently.
The backlog of parole requests comes on top of the more than 73,000 Afghan refugees already evacuated from the country as part of Operations Allies Welcome, which was focused on Afghans who worked for the US government as interpreters and in other jobs.
Most have arrived in the country and have been staying on military bases awaiting resettlement in communities across the country, though about 2,000 still remain overseas awaiting clearance to enter the US, according to Palmer.
But advocates question some of the USCIS’s recent decisions for Afghan humanitarian parole, such as prioritising applications from those already living in other countries. They say that approach is at odds with the programme’s purpose of helping those most at risk.
The Biden administration should instead focus on applications from women and girls, LGBTQ people and religious minorities still in the country, said Sunil Varghese, of the New York-based International Refugee Assistance Project.
It could also dispense with some of the financial documentation required for applicants and their sponsors since Congress has passed legislation making Afghan evacuees eligible for refugee benefits, said Lindsay Gray, CEO of Vecina, an Austin, Texas-based group that trains lawyers and volunteers on immigration matters.
Palmer did not directly address the critiques but said the agency, in each case, determines if there is a “distinct, well-documented reason” to approve humanitarian parole and whether other protections are available. USCIS also considers whether the person already has US ties, such as a family member with legal status or prior work for the US government, among other factors.
‘Everything just collapsed’
In the meantime, Afghans in the US have little choice but to wait and fret.
Bahara, another Afghan living in Massachusetts who asked her last name be withheld over concerns for her family, says she has been racked with guilt for her decision to leave her country to attend a local university.
The 29-year-old boarded a plane on August 15 just hours before the Taliban swept into the capital, Kabul, leading to one of the largest mass evacuations in US history.
“It was my dream, but it changed completely,” said Bahara, referring to enrolling in a US master’s degree programme. “I couldn’t stop thinking about my family. I couldn’t sleep the first few weeks. All I did was cry, but it didn’t help.”
Bahara said her family is worried because Taliban officials have been paying unannounced visits to people like her father who worked with the US government.
An American family is now sponsoring her family for humanitarian parole, giving Bahara hope even as she grieves over her country’s current situation.
“I cannot believe how everything just collapsed,” said Bahara, who founded a children’s literacy programme in Afghanistan. “All the achievements and hard work just added up to zero, and now people are suffering.”
Baktash Sharifi Baki, a green card holder who has been living in the US since 2014, was compelled to take more drastic measures as Afghanistan quickly unravelled this summer.
The Philadelphia resident, who served as an interpreter for the US government, travelled back in August in the hopes of shepherding his wife, daughter, mother and godson to safety.
But the family was not able to board any of the final commercial flights out of Kabul. Baki has appealed to the US government to allow them to board one of the charter flights that have recently resumed.
Meanwhile, a friend in Louisiana has offered to serve as the family’s sponsor for a humanitarian parole application, even covering the costly fees himself.
Baki and his family are staying for now with relatives in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif. But he worries his modest cash savings is dwindling just as the region’s harsh winter sets in and Afghanistan’s economic crisis is deepening.
“We are really facing a bad situation here,” Baki said. “We need to get out.”
Meanwhile, on Wednesday, the United Nations envoy for Afghanistan said the country is “on the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe” and urged the international community not to abandon the Afghan people.
Deborah Lyons said an estimated 60 percent of Afghanistan’s 38 million people are facing crisis levels of hunger in a food emergency that will likely worsen over the winter.
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