‘We will take revenge on your families’: Taliban threatens Afghan interpreters if they do not appear for trial
After the Taliban took control of
Afghanistan in mid-August, messages were sent to reassure the people about
their living conditions, but as usual for the extremist movement, the promises
were not fulfilled.
Summons and
threats
In the same context, on Friday,
October 1, the Taliban summoned Afghan interpreters who worked for the
Netherlands to appear in court.
The extremist movement was not
satisfied with that, but threatened to retaliate against their relatives in the
event of their failure to attend, according to the official Dutch NOS channel.
A message from the Taliban, presented by the mentioned channel, revealed the clear
and explicit threat.
It pointed out that the translators
went into hiding, but that their family members would be held responsible if
they did not appear in court, “in order to inflict severe punishment on them so
that the other traitors might learn a lesson.”
As for the person who received that
message, according to the channel, he was working for Europol in Afghanistan,
and he is accused of receiving money from foreigners.
As stated in another message
received by a translator who was accused by the Taliban of being responsible
for the killing of some of its members, “We will take revenge, and if we cannot
catch you, we will settle the account with your relatives.”
Difficult
situation
NOS also reported that all
indications show that the letters bearing official seals were sent by the
Taliban. It said it had contacted about ten translators or people who had
previously worked with the Dutch, all of whom expressed that their situation
was becoming increasingly difficult.
It is noteworthy that in June, the movement
urged translators who worked with foreign forces to repent, but asked them to
stay in Afghanistan after the withdrawal of foreign forces, stressing that they
would not be harmed.
Immediately after assuming power,
the Taliban also announced a general amnesty for Afghan government and military
officials.
But despite its pledge not to
retaliate, a classified United Nations report previously revealed the Taliban's
pursuit of people who worked with foreign forces.
The Taliban government has so far
not succeeded in gaining international recognition, and its all-male government
has faced Western criticism since the militant group took control of
Afghanistan after the withdrawal of foreign forces.
In another context, the Independent
reported that the United States spent billions of dollars on preparing,
training and arming the security forces in Afghanistan, but despite that, there
were destructive factors in return that led to the resounding defeat of the
regular forces that surrendered due to accumulated corruption, logistical
failure, and the state of loss in the country.
Slow and
painful collapse
The report pointed out that the
collapse of the Afghan regular forces was not surprising, as statements by
members of the special forces and police forces in Afghanistan in the period
from May to July said that this collapse was slow and painful and began several
months before the fall of the capital Kabul.
Foreign Policy revealed that any
Afghan who had previously cooperated with the US military needs to obtain special
immigrant visas (SIV), as they hope to obtain this visa sooner or later to
escape the revenge of the Taliban and the rest of the armed militias there.
Some US groups have had limited
success helping Afghans and their families evacuate, while others are trying to
help trapped Afghans find safe homes or send group chat alerts about Taliban
raids in different parts of Kabul.
Foreign Policy stressed that the US
government has not yet been able to accurately determine the number of SIV
applicants out of the approximately 124,000 people who were successfully
evacuated in the chaotic final weeks of the war, with tens, if not hundreds of
thousands of Afghans and their extended families who may be eligible for such
visas have been abandoned.
The report explained that abandoning
hundreds of thousands is based on interviews with more than a dozen sources and
experts, such as Afghans still in hiding, Biden administration officials,
career diplomats, and congressional aides.