New UK asylum policy threatens Afghan lives: ex-interpreter

Above, BF Hurricane arrives in Dover carrying migrants picked up in the English Channel on Oct. 18, 2022. The UK government’s proposal would see migrants choosing the cross-channel route lose any right to claim asylum. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 09 March 2023
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New UK asylum policy threatens Afghan lives: ex-interpreter

  • Rafi Hottak, who served with British Army, says many of his colleagues remain trapped in Afghanistan
  • UK government figures suggest over 71,000 Afghan asylum applications remain pending

LONDON: Proposals by the UK government to toughen its stance on migrants will risk the lives of Afghans who worked with the British Army, a former interpreter has warned.

Rafi Hottak, 36, who was wounded in an explosion while helping British soldiers fighting the Taliban in Helmand province, told Metro newspaper that many of his former colleagues would suffer as a result of new laws that would make entering the UK by small boat across the English Channel illegal.

The proposals, laid out by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, would see migrants choosing the cross-channel route lose any right to claim asylum in the UK, and make them liable for swift deportation.

Hottak, who came to the UK in 2011 after receiving threats from the Taliban, said many others like him remain in Afghanistan hiding from the group, which swept to power following the withdrawal of US-led coalition forces in August 2021.

“We are losing precious lives every day and most of them are people who have served the NATO forces in Afghanistan,” Hottak said.

“If the existing schemes do not include them, they are forced to flee the country and claim asylum.

“Now, if asylum routes are closed, it means the UK government is taking their fundamental human right away and telling them, ‘I will not save your life even if you have served the NATO forces and I would rather you are killed by the terrorist Taliban’.”

The UK has welcomed over 21,000 Afghans via two schemes since the Taliban returned to power. However, at least 4,300 people with leave to travel to the UK remain stuck in Afghanistan.

According to Ministry of Defence figures, over 71,000 applications made by Afghans to claim asylum in Britain have not been processed.


Suicide attacker behind deadly Islamabad mosque blast: security source

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Suicide attacker behind deadly Islamabad mosque blast: security source

  • The blast killed 15 people and wounded at least 80, local authorities say
  • Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif condemned the blast

ISLAMABAD: A suicide attacker was responsible for a deadly blast at a Shiite mosque in Islamabad on Friday, a security source said.
“The attacker was stopped at the gate and detonated himself,” the source told AFP on condition of anonymity.
The blast killed 15 people and wounded at least 80, local authorities said.
A senior police official said, on condition of anonymity, that the “explosion occurred after Friday prayers in a Shiite mosque.”
A statement from local authorities in Islamabad said 15 people were killed in the attack at the mosque in the Tarlai area of the city, adding that the “number of patients brought to various hospitals has exceeded 80.”
An AFP photographer outside the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) hospital saw dozens of wounded people arriving.
Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif condemned the blast.