Thousands of Afghans who flee to Turkey after Taliban takeover seek shelter to survive: Report
Feb 04, 2022
Kabul [Afghanistan], February 4 : Since the Taliban took control of Afghanistan in mid-August last year, thousands of people from the crisis-torn country have fled to Turkey looking for shelters to survive, said a media report.
Writing in Khaama Press, Razuddin Barlas, a student at the Erciyes University of Turkey, said, among those migrants, there were former government senior officials, parliament members, politicians, civil society & women rights activists, journalists, singers, and many more.
Those Afghan nationals were in a panic as they thought the Islamist hardliner Taliban would take vindictive revenge on them, impose harsh rules and curtail human rights as they did earlier in 1996, Barlas said.
A fresh wave of legal and illegal Afghan migration to Turkey has begun since the Taliban recaptured power from the Western-backed government in mid-August last year.
Most of them, who have migrated legally or illegally to Turkey, are desperately looking for shelters to survive. Afghan migrants are suffering from a plethora of livelihood challenges. Even in Turkey, Afghans are passing days with insecurity and uncertainty, the report said.
"August 15, 2021, was a dark day for the people of Afghanistan, including me, who didn't have any other choice other than leaving their country," said Farzana Adell (38), Former Chief of Staff at Senior Advisory to the President of Afghanistan on UN Affairs.
"As President Ashraf Ghani fled, the Afghan government was disturbed and all the important infrastructures of the country made in past years are collapsed," she added.
The worsening situation in Afghanistan forced her to leave her country. A women's rights activist Farzana Adell, is now living in Istanbul, the capital of Turkey, Khaama Press reported.
"Since the Taliban captured the incumbency; threats against government employees, civil society & women's rights activists have increased. Women, who make up half of Afghanistan's population, are left behind completely," Adell further said.
Since 2015, the world's largest migration crisis has fallen out after the Second World War, according to the international migration agencies, Khaama Press reported.
Turkey has been the largest host country in the region for hosting Afghan refugees. Farzana, who is also the founder of Gender Equality Research Organization in Afghanistan, said, "Like other immigrants in Turkey, I am living with an uncertain future, and spending every moment of my life in immigration time is a gradual death for an immigrant," Barlas noted.
"I fled when the Taliban forces seized capital Kabul. Otherwise, they would have killed me, because I am a young singer and I sang for my countrymen," said 18-year-old Rohullah Rozegar said, who fled to Kayseri, a town in Turkey from Afghanistan.
Despite reaching Turkey, the migrants from Afghans are facing a slew of challenges. Non-distribution of ID cards to the new migrants, rejection of asylum application by the Turkish Immigration Service and inactivation of health insurance are among the major problems the Afghan migrants are facing in Turkey, Barlas said.
"Afghans, who are entering Turkey alone from Afghanistan are usually not registered to the Turkish government. Some of these migrants are detained by the Turkish security forces and deported to Afghanistan, many of them live in Turkey without an ID card. In the absence of an ID card, they can't avail public medical services," Khamaa Press quoted Rohullah, who is waiting now to receive the immigration ID card issued by the Turkish authority.
As per the rules of the Turkish Immigration Service - the person whose application has already been rejected will not have access to the government services, including treatment and education. This is to remember that President Erdogan repeatedly said in the past that "Turkey is not going to be a warehouse of European immigrants," the report said.
"International Migration Organizations and the United Nations in Turkey have neither paid much attention to the situation of Afghan refugees and nor provided any humanitarian assistance or support to the Afghan displaced persons," Farzana remarked.
Farzana added that the Afghans, who recently fled and are currently struggling to survive in Turkey, are frustrated with their lives and future.
"We have no way back to Afghanistan and no place to live in a country that it is even worse than Taliban torture. The Taliban monitored the employees of the former government. The bank accounts of government and non-government employees in Afghanistan's private banks were filtered. Right now they are not allowed to receive their money from the bank. We are facing severe financial problems now. It is the problem that makes us upset," she further added.
Farzana thinks that international migration must establish a specific channel for solving the economic and health problems the new Afghan refugees are facing. So that the needy people can apply directly and quickly sort that out, the report added.