Afghans in Winnipeg reflect on year since Taliban takeover of Kabul
CBC
Farid Ahmad still can't believe it's been a year since Kabul fell to the Taliban after American and allied troops, including Canadians, left the country.
"I [am] still thinking like it's maybe a nightmare and maybe I will wake up and I will see things are totally different," said Ahmad, who worked as a journalist based in Afghanistan's capital before fleeing following the takeover.
Ahmad, who now lives in Winnipeg, said as a journalist, he remembers being faced with two choices when the Taliban took control of his home country.
"One is to escape, and the second is you have to hand over yourself to a terrorist group and work for them," he told CBC's Up to Speed host Stephanie Cram.
"But after two decades of working as a free journalist, it was very hard to work for a terrorist group and under their regime."
Since he escaped Afghanistan, Ahmad said it's been hard to watch the situation unfold in his home country — and to watch the response from the world.
LISTEN | One year after the fall of Kabul, an Afghan journalist reflects on the year of Taliban rule:
"The economic situation of people is very bad, poverty is very high. There [are] no job opportunities," he said.
"So the situation has worsened, [is] getting worse … day by day. But unfortunately, the world is also silent. And they are just watching us … watching [as] our people are suffering a lot of problems."
Afghan-Canadian Zobair Deen said it's also been difficult for him to watch the situation develop in Afghanistan over the past year.
Deen, who now lives in Winnipeg, worked as a political and security adviser for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) from 2004 to 2014.
"A lot of us … worked very hard for democracy in Afghanistan and paved the way for the new generation of Afghans to get the right education and to lead their country," he told CBC News at 6 host Janet Stewart.
"And to see Afghanistan fall back in the hands of terrorists, it's a heart-wrenching situation."
Deen said over the past year, he's been in regular contact with people who directly or indirectly supported the Canadian government's efforts in Afghanistan — people whose paperwork to allow them to come to Canada is still delayed.
Quebec mayor says 'one-size-fits-all' language law isn't right for his town where French is thriving
English is not Daniel Côté's first language but he says it's integral to the town he calls home.