Afghanistan calls on Afghans who helped US in war and are now stuck in Qatar to return home
Afghanistan's foreign ministry states Afghans who assisted the US war effort and are in Qatar can return home safely. This comes as reports suggest relocation to Congo for these individuals. The Afghans express deep distress and fear reprisals if ...

Afghanistan calls on Afghans who helped US in war and are now stuck in Qatar to return home
The statement Saturday by foreign ministry spokesman Abdul Qahar Balkhi comes after reports emerged that the Trump administration is in discussions to potentially send 1,100 Afghans who assisted the US during its war in Afghanistan and relatives of US service members to Congo.
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An organisation called #AfghanEvac that supports Afghan resettlement efforts said Wednesday that US officials had informed the group of discussions between the United States and Congo about taking the Afghan refugees who have been in limbo at Camp As-Sayliyah, a US base in Doha, for the past year.
The State Department said it is working to identify options to "voluntarily" resettle the refugees in a third country, but did not confirm which nations were being discussed.
Afghanistan's foreign ministry "reiterates that Afghanistan constitutes the shared homeland of all Afghans and it invites all those concerned, as well as others sharing a similar situation, (to) return to their homeland, whose doors remain open to them, to do so with full confidence & peace of mind," Balkhi wrote in his statement.
He added that "those intending to travel to another country may do so at an appropriate juncture through legal & dignified channels." Afghanistan's foreign ministry "stands ready to engage with all countries," Balkhi said, adding that the foreign ministry "underscores to all sides that there exist no security threats in Afghanistan, & none is compelled to leave the country on account of security considerations."
In a joint statement posted by the #AfghanEvac group on behalf of those in Camp As-Sayliyah, the Afghans said they had received no information from US officials about the talks to potentially relocate them, and had found out about it from the press. The state of limbo they have been living in is taking a severe toll on them, they said.
"We will say this plainly. We do not want to go to the Democratic Republic of Congo," the group said, adding that "it is a country in its own war. We have been in enough war. We cannot take our children into another one."
The Afghans in the camp in Doha said returning to Afghanistan was also not an option. "The Taliban will kill many of us for what we did for the United States," the group said in their statement. "This is not a fear. This is a fact. The United States knows this, because the United States is the reason we cannot go home."
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The relocation discussions, initially reported by The New York Times, come more than a year after President Donald Trump paused his predecessor's Afghan resettlement program as part of a series of executive orders cracking down on immigration.
That policy left thousands of refugees who fled war and persecution, and had gone through a sometimes yearslong vetting process to start new lives in America, stranded at places worldwide, including the base in Qatar.
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