At-risk Afghan teacher feels abandoned by UK
Just four of the 1,500 at-risk Afghan citizens who were eligible for resettlement following the Taliban takeover in 2021 have arrived in the UK. The BBC has spoken to Zuhra, who is just one of thousands who feel like they have been abandoned in Afghanistan.
"I'm sure I will be facing a death penalty because in such an extremist society, being a women with my character, my career, is not an easy thing," Zurha told the BBC's File on 4 programme.
Not long ago, Zuhra, not her real name, said she felt immense pride and happiness working for the British Council. For three years she taught the English language and British values to Afghan citizens and religious leaders.
Zuhra became widely recognised after starring in the British Council's promotional videos on Facebook and YouTube after being chosen as the face of its "English for Afghans" project.
"On the first day of my classes I did not have to introduce myself because when I was entering that class everybody knew who I was," she says.
Zuhra is one of more than 100 teachers who were left behind in Afghanistan when the Taliban took over in August 2021. Their work with the British means they are viewed as traitors and spies.
Her online fame has exposed her to extreme danger. She is living in hiding with her family, moving from place to place to avoid discovery, in fear for their lives.
"I cannot go freely outside, I have to change my appearance, and I have to wear a burkha," she explains. "One day a person may find me, and then I really don't know what will be the consequences, and what situation I will face."
The Afghan Citizens Resettlement Scheme (ACRS) was designed to offer a safe route to resettlement in the UK to Afghan citizens who worked alongside the British government during the 20 years it spent in the country.
One part of the first year of the ACRS scheme, called Pathway 3, offered 1,500 places to three specific groups including British Council teachers.
Despite the risks the teachers faced from the Taliban, the British Council did not encourage them to apply for evacuation until five days before the last flight left Kabul.
The British Council said: "In August 2021, the UK government extended the criteria of the scheme which meant our contractors became eligible for approval. We contacted our contractors at this point, including the teachers, and encouraged them to urgently apply if they had not already done so."
Labour MP, Dan Jarvis, is supporting the remaining Afghans.
He told the BBC: "These are people who stepped forward to serve at our invitation. I think it is a matter of of honour that we should be working across government day and night to get these people to a place of safety. Because if we don't, they will die."
Responsibility for the Afghan schemes is stretched across the Ministry of Defence, Foreign Office and Home Office.
A Home Office spokesman said: "The UK has made one of the largest commitments to support Afghans of any country and, so far, we have brought almost 23,000 vulnerable people to safety, including thousands of people eligible for our Afghan relocation schemes.
"Supporting the resettlement of eligible Afghans remains a top priority and we continue to work with the UNHCR, likeminded partners and countries neighbouring Afghanistan to support their safe passage here."
Meanwhile, it has been two months since Zuhra last heard from the UK government about her application.
For her, any progress cannot happen soon enough. She says she is still feeling hopeful. "It will be a window of opportunity for me and also my family because I have put everybody in danger - my parents, my siblings are in danger because of me. It's my responsibility to take them to safety but I really don't know if ACRS will support my family members or not."
Listen to File on 4: 'Abandoned in Afghanistan'
-
Train strikes: RMT members to walk out again on 2 JuneSomali shock as mayor filmed lashing partygoersProud Boy extremists have a new target: drag showsRussia's 'nervous' Victory Day parade... in 78 secondsOvo and Good Energy customers to get refunds after overchargingBBC reporter: My heartbreaking decision to leave SudanAndrew Tate house arrest extended another 30 daysChina raids another consultancy in anti-spy crackdownFBI responds to 'barricade situation' inside Fort Belvoir Army base in Virginia Beleaguered US congressman facing federal charges
Next article:Ryanair returns to profit as distantes jump
- ·Chelsea confirm the appointment of 'world class' Laurence Stewart as their new technical director... with Todd Boehly hailing the former Monaco chief as an 'crucial' piece in their major off-pitch revamp
- ·Trevelyan relative would consider famine payment
- ·Cheetah in India died of cardiac failure - report
- ·Mortgage refused 'for hosting Ukrainian refugees'
- ·'People investing with us will be rewarded:' Mark Zuckerberg DEFENDS 'historic' Metaverse plans notwithstanding adjacently $650 BILLION loss in market valuation this year - as Meta's stock plunges 11% and quarterly revenue falls for a second straight time
- ·Watch: Europeans cram onto Sudan evacuation planes
- ·Ryanair signs $40bn deal for 300 Boeing aircraft
- ·Turkey sends Mexico puppy after search dog's death
- · End of an era for Wally Lewis as rugby league great reveals he had to make huge life convert 'for my health' amid battle with epilepsy
- ·Ethiopia media guide
- ·89 rounds fired in Alabama shooting
- ·Dust storm causes multiple car pile-up in Illinois
- ·Police are granted more time to quiz Leeds hospital 'terror suspect': Man, 27, who was 'armed with a gun and viable explosive device' to be held in custody for a week
- ·Man 'didn't tell sick wife he was about to kill her'
- ·'Mad panic' as Russia evacuates nuclear plant town
- ·Two in two days: The shootings that shook Serbia
- ·Sylvia Syms dies at age 89: Actress who starred in Ice Cold In Alex, Victim, The Queen and EastEnders passes away 'peacefully' at a care home, her family reveal
- ·Delayed US-Canada hydro project gets go-ahead
- ·The Indian trapeze artist who became a circus legend
- ·Trump mistook rape accuser for ex-wife, trial told
- ·BREAKING NEWS: Ex-Lions and Chargers linebacker Jessie Lemonier dies aged 25: Agent confirms he and his girlfriend 'were expecting a child'
- ·Vietnam to ban anonymous social media accounts
- ·Amputee's attempt to climb Mount Everest begins
- ·Briton describes leaving Sudan amid gunfire
- ·Missing Princeton University student, 20, is found dead close to campus six days after she vanished: Cops say her death 'does NOT emerge to be suspicious or criminal in nature'
- ·How Tucker Carlson rode a wave of populist outrage
- ·Biden will send 31 Abrams tanks worth $400 million to Ukraine: White Ho utilize adds to Zelensky's arsenal after diplomatic row with Germany
- ·Indian herbal medicine sellers in Sudan seek rescue
- ·How Republican women reacted to Trump verdict
- ·Pioneering actress killed in Sudan cross-fire
- ·Food price inflation dips for second month in a row
- ·TV writers explain why they're walking out
- ·Indian state's ban on Islamic State film sparks row
- ·Derry man thankful to be alive after fleeing Sudan
- ·BREAKING NEWS: Single-engine plane crashes into New Hampshire acomponentment erecting killing EVERYONE on board and sending 40-foot flames leaping into the sky
- ·Kenya country profile