France evacuates five Afghan women 'threatened by Taliban'

Afghan female university students walk on their on way back home past a private university in Kabul, Afghanistan, on December 21, 2022. (AFP/File)
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Updated 04 September 2023
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France evacuates five Afghan women 'threatened by Taliban'

  • The women include a former university director, an ex-NGO consultant, a former TV presenter and a teacher
  • After the Taliban takeover, these women fled to neighbouring Pakistan where they sought temporary refuge

PARIS: France on Monday was due to receive five Afghan women "threatened by the Taliban" after repeated requests it create a humanitarian corridor for women shut out of public life, an official said. 

Since returning to power in August 2021, Taliban authorities have imposed a strict interpretation of Islam, with women bearing the brunt of laws the United Nations has labelled "gender apartheid". 

Women and girls have been banned from attending high school and university as well as barred from visiting parks, fairs and gymnasiums. 

They have also mostly been blocked from working for UN agencies or NGOs, with thousands sacked from government jobs or paid to stay at home. 

French immigration authority chief Didier Leschi told AFP that by presidential order, "special attention is being paid to women who are primarily threatened by the Taliban because they have held important positions in Afghan society... or have close contacts with Westerners. 

"This is the case for five women who will arrive today," Leschi said. 

The women include a former university director, an ex-NGO consultant, a former television presenter, and a teacher at a secret school in Kabul. 

One of the women was accompanied by three children. 

The women had been unable to leave Afghanistan on airlifts to Western countries when the Taliban returned to power in 2021. 

They fled to neighbouring Pakistan where they sought temporary refuge. From there, the French authorities organised their evacuation, Leschi said. 

Once they arrive in France, they will be registered as asylum seekers and given housing while their applications for refugee status are considered, Leschi said. 

Leschi said that such evacuations were "likely to be repeated" for other Afghan women with a similar profile. 

However, Delphine Rouilleault, the head of the France Terre D'Asile NGO working for refugees, said the evacuations were "not the fruit of a political decision" but gained "after a hard fight" to obtain visas for them. 

The women will be initially housed in a centre run by her organisation, which has been rallying for months for the evacuation of more Afghan women facing a similar situation. 

Rouilleault said "hundreds" of Afghan women were "hiding" in Pakistan. 

In the middle of 2021, French President Emmanuel Macron had pledged that France would "be by the side of Afghans". French authorities say nearly 16,000 people have been evacuated from Afghanistan since then. 

An NGO working for Afghan refugees and asylum seekers, Accueillir les Afghanes, in April deplored that Afghan women, especially those who were single, had been largely abandoned and asked Paris to put in place an "emergency" programme to take them in. 


Pakistan expresses solidarity with Australia as gunmen kill at least 12 in Bondi Beach shooting

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Pakistan expresses solidarity with Australia as gunmen kill at least 12 in Bondi Beach shooting

  • Gunmen targeted people gathered at Sydney’s famous Bondi Beach to celebrate Jewish Hannukah festival
  • Pakistan, itself a victim of “terrorism,” condemns violence against innocent civilians, says President Zardari

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari expressed solidarity with Australia on Sunday as gunmen killed at least 12 people and wounded a dozen others in the Bondi Beach shooting that targeted the Jewish community in the country. 

New South Wales (NSW) police said two people had been taken into custody, and the Australian Broadcasting Corp. said one of at least two gunmen was among those killed. Around a dozen people were taken to local hospitals after the shooting, an NSW ambulance spokesperson said.

The attackers targeted a large group gathered at the northern end of Sydney’s Bondi Beach, near or at Bondi Park playground, as per news reports, when the attack happened. Gunmen attacked people who were there to celebrate an event related to the Jewish festival of Hannukah. 

“President Asif Ali Zardari has expressed sorrow over the tragic shooting in Sydney, conveyed condolences to the victims’ families & wished the injured a speedy recovery,” the president of Pakistan’s official account on X wrote. 

“Pakistan itself a victim of terrorism, stands in solidarity with & condemns violence against innocent civilians.”

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif also condemned the Sydney attack, expressing condolences with victims of the incident. 

“Pakistan condemns terrorism in all its forms and manifestations,” he wrote on X. 

As per international media reports, one of the gunmen has been identified as Naveed Akram from Bonnyrigg in Sydney’s southwest. His country of origin remains unclear. 

One of the world’s most famous beaches, Bondi is typically crowded with locals and tourists, especially on warm weekend evenings.

Videos circulating on X appeared to show people on the beach and nearby park scattering as multiple gunshots and police sirens could be heard. One video showed a man dressed in a black shirt firing a large weapon before being tackled by a man in a white T-shirt who wrestled his weapon off him. A different man was seen firing a weapon from a pedestrian bridge.

Another video showed two men pressed onto the ground by uniformed police on a small pedestrian bridge. Officers could be seen trying to resuscitate one of the men. Reuters could not immediately verify the footage.

The attack came almost exactly 11 years after a lone gunman took 18 people hostage at the Lindt Cafe in Sydney. Two hostages and the gunman were killed after a 16-hour standoff.