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Article about the single american woman:
A single American woman from California is hiding from the Taliban in Kabul. Fatima asked the State Department and Sen. Alex Padilla (D-CA) for help, but got none.
Fatima (not her real name) is terrified and desperate for help. She has been through a series of shocking tragedies in the last year that has left her trapped in Afghanistan. “I’m a U.S. Citizen and terrified and desperate to leave this country, which is now under the rule of the cruel Taliban,” she wrote to me in the first email. This story is not behind the paywall so people in Afghanistan can easily read it. Thank you to my paid subscribers for funding this ongoing work. Fatima flew to Kabul in October 2020 for one of her nephew’s weddings. “I planned on staying here for a while with them -- until the tragic incident happened, and their parents went missing,” she emailed about her brother and his wife. “There is no information about them— if they are alive or not. So I am left here as a guardian to my nephews.” Fatima’s brother and his wife disappeared a month ago. They were in Laghman Province, where he was one of the heads of the tribe. She said that she and her three nephews searched for the couple for a while. “But then, for our own safety, we thought it was best to just wait for any possible news about them because there didn't seem to be much we could do,” she said. “And even now, I think it's best for the safety of my nephews to not make it too prominent.” So Fatima took over as guardian for her nephews. The youngest will be 19-years-old on Sept. 11. The other two are in their early 30s. “The wife of my eldest nephew, who is now like a daughter-in-law to me, is pregnant and expecting a baby soon. I'm taking care of her, as a mother.” First, her brother and sister-in-law disappeared without a trace, then came the swift Taliban takeover of Kabul. Fatima did not know that she had to get out of Afghanistan quickly. The American government said it would be months or longer before the Taliban took control of the country. But then the Taliban rolled into Kabul and took over the Presidential Palace on Aug. 15. “When the government collapsed, it was shocking and very sudden. No one was ready for it,” she said. She knew it was now a rush to escape before the U.S. left the country on Aug. 31. She tried calling her government to find out what to do. She said the State Department didn’t reply to the online reparation form. She also called the emergency assistance number on State’s form. ”It kept ringing, but no one would pick up.” “As Aug. 31 deadline was getting closer, we got desperate and went to the airport without an email [from State] — just waving our passports in the hope of getting any possible attention,” Fatima recalled. But they could never get through the huge crowd and through the gate, even with her American passport. The last time they tried to get a flight out of Afghanistan was Aug. 25. “We were planning to go again on the night of the 26th, but it was evening when we heard about the twin blasts outside the airport.” The explosions were from the ISIS-K suicide bomber who killed 13 US troops and many more Afghan people. “They said no one will be left behind,” she said. “But we heard on the news that no one should go to the airport until they tell us. No one ever told me to go to the airport, so I was left stranded.” Her government lied to her. She saw on the news around 1 am on Aug. 31 that the last U.S military plane left Afghanistan. “It thrashed our hopes,” she said. “And we realized that we are left behind. And now we are trapped.” Fatima is worried for her family because her nephews will need a Special Immigration Visa (SIV) to go to the U.S. with her. She says they are all at “high risk” of being targeted by the Taliban. Her eldest nephew worked for USAID, the State Department offshoot agency. Also, they believe they are in serious danger by the people who took Fatima’s brother and wife. “I can't leave them when their lives are at risk,” she wrote to me. “I won't be going anywhere without them. They are my family and all I have.” Fatima has tried contacting everyone she could think of in the U.S. government in the past weeks. She still has not heard back from the State Department. Since the U.S. Embassy in Kabul is closed, there’s no one to help her. Her own senator has failed to do his job. “I have talked to the assistants for Senator Alex Padilla several times and they have my information, and they know where I am. Every single time, they tell me that they would help, but then I don't get any response back.” After I started emailing Fatima this week, I’ve tweeted repeatedly to Padilla’s office about her case and got no reply. I called Wednesday and the office was on voice mail at 4:30 pm.
The single american woman



