Canadian Afghans stranded in Kabul frantic for help from Canadian government - Action News
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Canadian Afghans stranded in Kabul frantic for help from Canadian government

The story of a small group of Canadian Afghans trying to escape the country gives a glimpse of the danger that hundreds of others with ties to Canada now face in the aftermath of the Taliban takeover.

Hundreds with ties to Canada face danger following Taliban takeover

Pressure on Canadian government to help more people out of Afghanistan

3 years ago
Duration 2:01
Pressure mounts on the Canadian government to help more people fleeing Afghanistan. One Canadian citizen struggling to get out talks about his harrowing attempt to get on a plane.

At 2a.m. Friday, they got the word "get to the airport" the signal they had been anxiously awaitingfor days.

Canadian authorities were urging a group of 15 Canadian Afghan men, women and children, even a baby,to get to the entry gate at Kabul's airport in Afghanistan.

"We were told that when we get to the scene, there will be Canadian and American soldiers or guards who will escort us and ensure that we can actually enter the airport," Aleemsaid."That did not happen."

Aleem is not his realname, and CBC News is protecting his identity out of safety concerns.

With their passports, permanent resident cards and small maple leaf flags, theyassembled to make the dangerous drive through multiple Taliban checkpoints. They were not attacked and got to the entry gate at the airport, but in front of them was a scene of chaos, desperation and violence.

'We took all the risks'

Frantically waving the red and white flags andflashing their Canadian passports, at risk of exposing their identities to a desperate crowd, they tried to get the attention of theline of mostly American soldiers.

"We took all the risks just with the hope that our families wouldbe able to call out and someone would say, 'Yes, you're Canadian, come forward.'"

Instead, the soldiers were shooting near the crowd and in the air, hoping to scatter the thousands of people crowding the entry.

A U.S. soldier shoots in the air with his pistol while standing guard behind barbed wire as Afghans sit on a roadside near the military part of the airport in Kabul on Friday. (Wakil Kohsar/AFP/Getty Images)

"They were shooting at us, non-stop shooting. There were women, children trembling and shaking from the sound," Aleemsaid.

"The soldiers were just firing; they were overwhelmed with the crowd that was in front of them," he told CBC News. "This is a passage to death much less thana passage to safety and security."

Hundreds of Canadian Afghans stranded

Hundreds, or more, Canadian Afghansare trapped in Kabul professionals with careers and jobs with international organizations, with long ties toCanada, who are now terrified that their lives are in danger after the Talibantook over the capital city a week ago. The militant group now has authority over most of the country.

In spite of early assurances bythe Talibanthat people who worked with countries who waged a 20-year war with the militant group would not be sought out and punished, multiple reports say Taliban fighters are going door to door in some neighbourhoods taking namesand apprehending people and property.

Taliban fighters are seen patrolling a street in Kabul on Thursday. (Rahmat Gul/The Associated Press)

Aleem's group ison a Canadian evacuation list,and they had hoped they would soon be safe inside the airport perimeter joining thousands of others escaping the last harrowing week in Afghanistan when their worlds changed overnight.

A Canadian military aircraft took 188 people out ofKabul Thursday night, the first Canadian airlift since the Afghan government collapsed lastSunday, as the Taliban rode into the capital.

"We have now two of our largest air carriers running back and forth from Kabul. We're going to keep those flights going for as long as possible," Canadian Immigration Minister Marco Mendicinosaid on Friday.

In all, 8,000 to datehave been safely evacuated by multiple countries since Sunday, according to NATO, but there is growingconcern that Canada's evacuation effort has been slower than other countries.

PM says evacuation flights will continue

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, dogged by questions about Afghanistan during the first week of the federal election campaign, has admitted thatnot everyone who wants to or is eligible will get out, but he pledged again that evacuation flights will continue.

"I can tell you that everyone is working incredibly hard day and night to try and get as many people out of Afghanistan to safety as possible," he said Friday on a campaign stop in Winnipeg.

The United States rescued 169 people by helicopter from a hotel near the airport on Thursday when they couldn't reach an entry gate.

A Taliban fighter walks past a beauty salon in Kabul on Thursday. (Wakil Kohsar/AFP/Getty Images)

Trudeau did not answer when asked if Canadian authorities could collect people in the city and get them safely to the airport.

The prime minister has also harshly criticized the Taliban, who strictly control multiple checkpoints on routes to the airport. There have been reports of beatings and other violence as they try to turn back the flow of people determined to get out of the country.

While that has been a dangerous barrier for many, Aleem's group was able to pass by, only to get stranded right at the gate.

Advocates for Aleem in Canada have alerted top governmentofficials in the prime minister's and foreign affairs minister's officesthat he and his family are in danger and have appealed urgently for help. "It's not that they don't know what's happening," he said.

Federal election call frustrating

He is frustrated with the timing of an election campaign launched during an international crisis.

"I'm talking about Canada's sole responsibility to protect and secure its citizens. Where is that reality right now for 15 Canadian lives? How can I put that question to Justin Trudeau right now on the election campaign?"Aleem asked rhetorically.

Taliban officials arrange a Taliban flag, before a press conference at the Government Media Information Centre, in Kabul on Tuesday. (Rahmat Gul/The Associated Press)

He added that "there is no guarantee that we will make it [out] alive, unless something is done urgently."

The group turned back from the gate on Friday, worried they would be trampled or get injured or killed in the melee, then had to make the dangerous ride back into the city. They have left their homes and cannot go back, so they'restaying together in an undisclosed location.

"We need a solution," Aleemsaid, pleading for a contact to help them.

They say they will try to get to the airport again. "We have no choice, our lives are at risk where we are right now and the more we delay, the more the consequences will be dire for the Canadians."