HAbu hopes his family is on the list.On the list of people who had the opportunity to take one of the last rescue flights Armed forces Try to leave Kabul. But the prospect is zero. From 2007 to 2013, Habu worked as an interpreter in the German armed forces. From 2007 to 2013, he worked in Kunduz, home of the German Bundeswehr. For the German armed forces, for NATO, he performed many dangerous tasks. He and his wife were allowed to leave the country, and he has been living and working in Frankfurt since 2014. His family is still in Afghanistan.
He said his mother, sister and brothers went to Kabul. They did not stay in Kunduz.When the family home is burnt down Taliban Kunduz took it. Habu said the situation changed as soon as the Allied soldiers left. The externally purified Taliban will warn those who work for the allies: If we are in the government, you will have consequences. “The house is gone, everything is gone,” Yu Bu said. “My family has nothing left.” His mother and siblings hid in relatives’ houses in Kabul. Without going out, the children were sent to find food. There is no hope of going to an airport blocked by the Taliban without a permit and no documents from the host country. Like Yubu, countless former Allied local workers have been affected. Bundeswehr soldiers who have been to Afghanistan received calls from former comrades for help, and they could only convey their concerns. They know the degree of pain that the West is leaving behind those Afghans who want to build a democratic and human rights-ruled democracy—not Sharia law, nor the tyranny of the Taliban.
The reporter was turned away by American soldiers
What happened there is not even basically expressed in the photos of Kabul Airport that have been and are traveling around the world. What is a military machine with 800 people? A painful picture because we have not seen many people who also want to join and are in danger. The Americans immediately expelled more than a dozen journalists who wanted to report on the incident and eventually arrived in Kabul. “Under the threat of the military police,” Paul Ronzheimer, deputy editor of the American Bild, said on Twitter on Wednesday that the Americans forced him and ten other reporters to fly to Qatar. This is a “blatant attack on freedom of the press.” The US State Department had previously suggested whether journalists should be allowed to enter the city at their own risk. “But given the stigma caused in Afghanistan, the U.S. government is obviously afraid to criticize the media and does not want witnesses.”
Freelance writer Stefanie Glinski (Stefanie Glinski), who worked for the British guardian And reported for various German media (including FAZ), wrote on Twitter that the Americans arrested 11 journalists at the airport. If there were no security convoys organized by the Qataris, the Americans would not allow reporters to leave the airport. The guidelines kept changing, and journalists were eventually forced to leave. She was not even allowed to say goodbye to her dear friend. “The media is being censored,” Stefanie Glinski wrote.
There are no reporters, no witnesses, no news, not now, nor in the future: once the Americans withdraw, the world public may only get a piecemeal understanding of what the Taliban has done to their noble rhetoric. In November last year, Afghan journalist Zahra Joya used his own funds to create the Rukhshana Media platform, which mainly reports on the situation of Afghan women. The project is named after Rukhshana, a 19-year-old girl from Ghor Province, who fled a forced marriage at the end of 2015, was charged with adultery and was stoned. The video recorded the terrible killing of this young woman. “I expect the worst,” Zahra Joya said in interviews with The Guardian and Reuters News Research Institute these days, in terms of Taliban rule. But she did not want to give up hope that their rule would not take the form of the 1990s until 2001. In the past two decades, many things have become better, including women. You hope this will be preserved. Rukhshana Media reported on the changes in the situation in Afghanistan: there were reports that the Taliban had imposed punishments, and people were generally worried about what might happen. The Von Habs were caught in the middle, unable to find a way out.



