CRY FREEDOM.net
Welcome to cryfreedom.net,
formerly known as Womens Liberation Front.
A website
that hopes to draw and keeps your attention for both the global 21th. century 3rd. feminist revolution as well
as especially for the Zan, Zendegi, Azadi uprising in Iran and the
struggles of our sisters in other parts of the Middle East. This online magazine
that started December 2019 will
be published every 2 days. Thank you for your time and interest.
'WOMEN, LIFE, FREEDOM'
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Actual news |
February 27 - 19, 2025
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February 12 -
January 30, 2025 |
When one hurts or kills a women
one hurts or kills hummanity and is an antrocitie.
Gino d'Artali
and: My mother (1931-1997) always said to me <Mi
figlio, non esistono notizie <vecchie> perche puoi imparare qualcosa da
qualsiasi notizia.> Translated: <My son, there is no such thing as so
called 'old' news because you can learn something from any news.>
Gianna d'Artali.
200,000 Afghan refugees stranded
Zan times - March 4, 2025 - By: Khadija Haidary and Atia FarAzar
<<Trump’s order has stranded 200,000 Afghan refugees
Earlier this year, Maryam had her younger sister’s bag packed a week
before she was to leave for a new life in the United States. She told
Zainab that she was to strive to achieve her dreams. For Zainab, life in
the United States represented a second start. She’d been accepted into
the College of Arts at Kabul University before the Taliban assumed power
in 2021. Zainab was one of the lucky ones. She’d taken part in a
one-year internship program in the U.S. Embassy, which made her eligible
for a P-2 refugee case in the United States. Maryam, who had worked for
four years at the Afghan-American University in Afghanistan, then
succeeded in applying for asylum in the United States. When the
immigration files for both sisters were accepted by the U.S. government,
they travelled to Pakistan with their mother and three brothers to
proceed with the next steps in the process. “My father passed away six
years ago. After that, I became the head of the family, but with the
arrival of the Taliban, I lost my job, and we were forced to sell
everything — including our car and household belongings — and move to
Pakistan,” Maryam explained. They’ve been in Pakistan for three years,
waiting to complete the elaborate process. In January 2025, 30-year-old
Maryam received news that her immigration file had reached its final
stage and that her flight would be scheduled soon. Zainab was due to
travel to the United States on February 5. But after Donald Trump became
president of the United States on January 20, he issued an executive
order suspending the U.S. refugee assistance program. As part of that
freeze, the Trump administration cancelled the flights of 1,600 Afghans
to the United States. In particular, the executive order affects those
with P-1, P-2, and P-3 category refugee claims. P-1 cases — representing
“priority one” claims — include individuals with “compelling protection
needs” referred by embassies, NGOs, or the UNHCR. P-2 cases include
those whom the U.S. State Department identified as persons in specific
at-risk groups, while P-3 cases cover those awaiting family
reunification in the United States. In addition, other Afghans whose
humanitarian cases affected by the new Trump order have had the
processing of their cases suspended for up to three months. Afghan-Evac,
an organization that works to transfer Afghans to the United States,
confirmed that the P-1 and P-2 refugee cases for Afghans have been
halted. On January 23, it wrote on X, “This is disheartening for us and
many of our allies; however, we will continue our efforts and hope that
this barrier is removed.” Afghan-e-UK also published a notice sent by
the U.S. State Department. The email stated that following the issuance
of the executive order, the entry of refugees into the United States has
been suspended until further notice, and all scheduled flights for
refugees to the United States have been cancelled. No one from the U.S.
government informed Zainab that her flight had been cancelled. “No one
is responding to our repeated calls. We send emails and receive no
reply,” Maryam told Zan Times on February 6. “The IOM [UN International
Organization for Migration] office is in a location where, unless you
have an appointment in advance, they won’t allow you in.” When Maryam
learned that she and her sister would not be travelling to America, she
felt suffocated: “I felt short of breath. I was gasping, my hands were
sweating, and I became weak.” It was a feeling she hadn’t had since the
Taliban returned to power in 2021. Now, the symptoms are back: “I
visited the doctor five times; no one understood my pain. I am
suffering, I can’t sleep at night, and I am terribly scared.” For now,
they are living in a one-room house dealing with the uncertainty of not
knowing if their flights to the United States will ever be rescheduled.
In addition, this seven-member family is also grappling with the fact
that their Pakistani visas have expired. Given that Pakistan is in the
midst of a massive deportation effort focused on Afghan migrants and
refugees, they know that the police might arrest them and send them back
to Afghanistan at any moment. “In Afghanistan, there is no home or place
left for us, and here we have no peace,” explains Maryam. “We have come
to a remote village near Islamabad to hide from the police. Truly, this
sense of hopelessness has overwhelmed us.” Maryam and Zainab are among
many Afghan women whose lives have been thrown into turmoil by decisions
of the new Trump administration. In March 2022, Rahila arrived in
Pakistan after obtaining a Pakistani visa. Like Zainab, she was
scheduled to fly on February 5 from Islamabad Airport to the United
States. Her destination was Seattle, Washington. To fund the journey,
Rahila sold her new bike and sewing machine — which she used to cover
her daily expenses — to fund the journey. Like other migrants, Rahila
learned about the cancellation of her flight through social media. “When
I found out, I was stunned. I went into shock,” she tells Zan Times. “I
was out of it for a week. I felt that all doors had been closed to me.”
Rahila holds a bachelor’s degree in economics and worked for five years
with USAID projects and various offices in Afghanistan. By now, Rahila
had exhausted her savings and her “family visit” type of visa had long
since expired. As an illegal migrant, she lives with three other women
and scrounges for work as a tailor and a weaver. Her unemployed parents
and two sisters live in Afghanistan while her 21-year-old brother
dropped out of school and moved to Iran for work. Rahila wanted to bring
her family to the United States but, as a single P-2 refugee applicant,
she isn’t allowed to include older relatives. She sees no future for
herself in Afghanistan and hopes never to return to her homeland. For
her, Afghanistan is a country where she has neither the right to work,
nor the right to education, nor the right to a normal life. The impact
of Trump’s decisions is widening. A February 19 Reuters report revealed
that the U.S. State Department’s Office of the Coordinator for Afghan
Relocation Efforts (CARE) has been ordered to prepare for its closure in
April. This shutdown will prevent an estimated 200,000 Afghans, stranded
in countries like Pakistan, Albania and Qatar, from being able to travel
to the United States. As of now, 3,000 Afghans vetted for resettlement
in the United States in Albania and Qatar remain in limbo, while the
situation for holders of P-1 and P-2 refugee claims in Pakistan is dire.
According to more than 10 Afghan migrants in Pakistan who talked to Zan
Times, the situation in that country is extremely grim. Obtaining a
legal tourist visa — which is valid for six months and costs up to
US$1,200 — is out of reach for many migrants in Pakistan, who are
already struggling with daily expenses. To avoid being caught in
Pakistani police deportation sweeps, some Afghans, particularly women
whose lives were at risk in Afghanistan, have moved to remote areas to
hide. Desperation and terror are common among Afghan refugees in
Pakistan. In November 2021, Saideh, her husband, and his entire family
arrived in Pakistan. After working in collaboration with the Americans
for 15 years, her husband had received a P-2 refugee claim to bring his
entire family, including his married children, to the United States. “We
sold our household items, gold and jewelry, our caravan, everything,”
Saideh explains. That money got them to Pakistan a few months ahead of
their trip to the United States. She and eight family members were to
fly to California on February 13. Those plans are now in limbo. Saideh
hasn’t received any communication from the IOM or the U.S. Office of
Refugee Resettlement. “Without a visa, we were stuck. We believed we
were truly heading to America, where these hardships would be made up
for,” she says. Now, she is one of 14 people from three families crowded
into a two-bedroom apartment in Pakistan. When they can, they beg
neighbours or acquaintances for a place to sleep, if only for a night.
For 31‐year‐old Saideh, who holds a bachelor’s degree in law and once
managed a ministry before the fall of the republic, life is almost too
difficult to contemplate: “We never thought it would take this long or
that we would have to endure so much hardship. Now, with another three
months of suspension looming, we do not know what will become of our
cases.” “When we heard our flights were cancelled, by God, we were all
in shock. For hours we sat as if in mourning, barely able to move” she
recounts. When her husband was told, his blood pressure plummeted. He
and his three brothers were so furious at the U.S. decision. Saideh is
struggling with depression and fears the thought of being forced back to
Afghanistan. “During this time, everyone has learned that we have an
American case. Even the Taliban have been informed,” she explains. “If
we return, they will definitely arrest the men in our family and even
us.” They have no other option but to sell their remaining assets and
continue hiding in Pakistan.
Another Afghan woman living in limbo is Shirin Gol. Before the Taliban
regained power, she and her family enjoyed a comfortable life. Shirin,
who has a bachelor’s degree in law, worked in the gender department of
the Ministry of Public Health in Kabul while her husband, who has a
master’s in management and commerce, held an important government
position. Fearing for their lives, she, her husband, and their four
children illegally crossed over into Pakistan on the day Kabul fell in
2021. “The day we entered Pakistan was the worst day of our lives. In
this long period of waiting here, not even a drop of relief has passed
our lips,” she recalls. Now, they are “in a dire economic state on
borrowed money, without any work.” Their only hope was resettlement.
Their case had progressed to the stage where their flights had been
scheduled and a home procured for them in the United States. On January
22, they read about the flight cancellations on the X site. “When we
read that news, our limbs went numb. We looked at each other in
disbelief. I was in shock — and I nearly had a heart attack,” Shirin
says. They fell into a state of despair and could only console one
another. Like others, they’ve received no updates from officials. Shirin
Gol and her husband have always focused on building a better future for
their children. Now, they have no good options: “When our case reached
its final stage, we sold all our belongings in Islamabad and were ready
to travel to the United States. But now, returning to Afghanistan, we
have nothing left.”
Khadija Haidary and Atia FarAzar (pen name) are Zan Times journalists.>>
Source:
https://zantimes.com/2025/03/04/trumps-order-has-stranded-200000-afghan-refugees/
Women's
Liberation Front 2019/cryfreedom.net 2025