‘Please let us on the bus’: Broken Heart at Kabul Airport Convoy – News2IN
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‘Please let us on the bus’: Broken Heart at Kabul Airport Convoy

'Please let us on the bus': Broken Heart at Kabul Airport Convoy
Written by news2in

KABUL: Afghanistan ride a convoy of buses given by the Taliban escort to Kabul Airport speaking Sunday broken heart driving past a large crowd to join them.
Tens of thousands of people gathered around the North Airport of the capital in hopes of getting a flight out of the country as an evacuation run by the US military continued in chaos.
People have been destroyed to death in riots, while pictures of families who handed a child on a wall to a soldier – and the young man clings to the side of the military aircraft when rolling up the runway – surprised in the world.
A climbing convoy that left the hotel in the city center on Sunday to AFP a large crowd camping at a close intersection with the airport – many sleeping in the open.
Families who hope to escape the miracle are filled between boundaries of barbed wire from unofficial landless land that separates the Taliban fighters from US forces and the remnants of Afghan special troops to help them.
“As soon as they saw our convoy, they got up and ran towards the bus,” he said.
“They showed us their passports or other documents …
a man came to my window with his wife and child and waved his passport saying ‘I have a British visa, but can’t enter.
Please let us take the bus’.” There is a report on the dismissal The Taliban, harassed and even detained Afghans who tried to escape, but the reporter said the convoy was largely without incident.
“Who doesn’t care about us,” he said.
The United States – and other countries – have plans to offer protection this year to tens of thousands of Afghans after Washington’s decision to withdraw all of his troops from the country.
They offer a major chance of living abroad, including Afghans who have worked for foreign forces during the 20-year occupation that follows the overthrow of the Taliban after the September 11 attacks.
But the plans were thrown into chaos by the defeat of the devastating Taliban Afghan forces, and they returned to power last weekend.
“Everyone has a reason to leave,” said a journalist about the convoy to AFP.
“Some are journalists, other university female students …
Then they work with strangers.” A girl cried at the hotel before the convoy departed.
“The Taliban day comes, I know life has ended up for me in Afghanistan.” he says.
“Living under their government means burying all my ambitions in life.” Those in the convoy are now waiting for their turn to be evacuated to the west – through the Coronavirus isolation camp in Qatar.
“My children cried because they were exhausted, but I told them a little more for the upcoming flight and then we were saved,” Haji Hamid said, with his wife and four young people behind him.
“Death and oppression will follow us if we live,” he said.
“I keep telling them ‘one day, you will thank me’.”

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