This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. Learn more

Legislators Beg Biden Administration To Evacuate LGBTQ+ Afghans Before The Taliban Kills Them

Gabir, a 26-year-old gay man living in Afghanistan, was dining at a restaurant with his boyfriend of eight months. The two met at university, became friends, and dreamed of moving to Europe to get married. But a few hours after their meal together, Gabir learned that the Taliban had picked up his boyfriend.

The Taliban beat his boyfriend bloody, killed, and dismembered him, then threw his body parts in the street as a warning of how the Islamic militant group handles LGBTQ+ people. His boyfriend was 24 years old.

Later, a person claiming to be with the Taliban called Gabir.

“I know you are gay,” the caller told Gabir. “Before capturing Kabul, we knew everything about you. You have three or four friends who are gay. You have a boyfriend. Once we settle here in Kabul, we will not let you live. If we find you, we will kill you.”

Gabir has since gone into hiding, dropping out of university, and cutting all contact with his friends and family to avoid being caught.

Homosexuality was already an offense punishable by imprisonment in Afghanistan. But now that the Taliban regained control of the entire country, Gabir and countless other LGBTQ+ Afghans have two choices: flee or die.


Wielding guns and the supposed authority of God, Taliban members have begun searching people’s homes, their pockets, and their phones, according to Aziz, a gay Afghan 21-year-old. If they find any evidence of queerness, they can shoot you on the spot and then go after anyone you’ve contacted on your phone.

If Aziz comes out to his family, he said, “They would beat me and throw me out the house.”

Even if he initially survives, he’ll remain in grave danger. Gay people, a Taliban judge promised earlier this year, will be prosecuted and executed by stoning or pushing a wall on top of them.

LGBTQ+ Afghans only have one hope: that foreign governments and organizations will help them flee.

According to LGBTQ Nation, on Wednesday, Democratic New Hampshire Representative Chris Pappas led 63 lawmakers in pleading with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken to help LGBTQ+ Afghans leave the country. Pappas and his fellow lawmakers called on the State Department to extend its recently announced refugee admissions program to LGBTQ+ Afghans.

Additionally, the lawmakers asked the Department of Defense to ensure that LGBTQ+ Afghans receive uninterrupted access to Kabul International Airport so they’re not harmed while trying to flee.

“While we appreciate that the situation in Afghanistan is fluid, you have the power to protect the lives of countless LGBTQ+ Afghans from the horrors they face living under a regime that threatens their very existence,” Pappas’ letter to Blinken stated.

The letter was also supported by Council for Global Equality, the National Center for Transgender Equality, Athlete Ally, the Trevor Project, the Human Rights Campaign, Lambda Legal, PFLAG National, and the National Equality Action Team (NEAT).

On August 14, Canada announced its intention to resettle over 20,000 Afghan citizens, with an emphasis on protecting LGBTQ+ people, women, and others typically targeted by the Taliban. The US has yet to announce any such policy for LGBTQ+ Afghans.

Rainbow Railroad, a global nonprofit that aims to help LGBTQ+ people flee persecution, said it has already received 50 requests for help from LGBTQ+ Afghans.

“We need to hold governments accountable to really support individuals,” Kimahli Powell, the executive director of Rainbow Railroad, told TIME magazine. “They’re going to need access to housing; they’re going to need access to emotional and mental health support, they’re going to need access to resources. I think that’s the opportunity for individuals, civil societies, and governments to provide.”

One GoFundMe fundraiser, created by three queer Afghans living in the US, raised over $45,000 to help LBGTQ+ Afghans. The money would’ve helped pay for passports, visas, plane tickets, and other evacuation costs.

However, when the organizers tried to access the money, GoFundMe couldn’t approve the withdrawal “due to Taliban control.”

GoFundMe has since advised people instead to donate to international humanitarian groups like Doctors Without Borders and UNICEF. But LGBTQ+ activists worry that these organizations won’t specifically help LGBTQ+ Afghans in the way that direct donations would.

LGBTQ+ activists in the US have urged others to donate and volunteer with groups like OutRight Action International, Immigration Equality, ILGA World and Human Rights Campaign Global. These groups have long histories of specifically working with LGBTQ+ individuals living in dangerous regimes.

Meanwhile, the US has had trouble evacuating Americans and Afghan allies who assisted the US military during its 20-year occupation. Legislators have slammed President Joe Biden for not rushing evacuation efforts earlier on.

Now that the Taliban is surrounding the Kabul airport and monitoring borders and roads, it’s difficult for anyone to leave without risking their lives.

Both Gabir and Aziz said they expect to die. Both are in hiding and say they are unable to reach the airport.



Read related myGwork articles here:

Taliban Announces They’ll Institute Sharia Law As LGBTQ+ People Try To Escape Afghanistan

Fundraiser for Afghan LGBTQ+ Community Raises Thousands

Trans American Among Those Abandoned by US Military

Fears Grow for LGBTQ+ Afghans After Taliban Victory



Keep up to date with the latest myGnews 

 

Sign up to myGwork

________

LGBTQ+ professionals, LGBTQ+ Graduates, LGBTQ+ professional network, LGBTQ+ professional events, LGBTQ+ networking events, LGBTQ+ Recruitment, LGBTQ+ Friendly organizations, LGBTQ+ Friendly companies, LGBTQ+ jobs

Share this

myGwork
myGwork is best used with the app