امریکا روند تخلیه از افغانستان را پس از دو ماه توقف از سرگرفت
Cyanan reports that the evacuation of American citizens and vulnerable people from Afghanistan has resumed after a month of suspension.
Two US-chartered flights left Kabul on Wednesday, according to two informed sources. This is the first evacuation flight since November.
According to these sources, an unknown number of Americans left Afghanistan on a Qatar Airways flight.
The State Department has not yet commented.
Earlier this month, Sihanyan reported that about 80 Americans were waiting to leave Afghanistan.
On the other hand, Axius News Agency reported, citing informed sources, that the United States is developing a plan to expedite the relocation and resettlement of thousands of Afghans from Qatar to the United States.
The plan allows Afghans to be processed within 30 days of entering a military base in Qatar and transferred to the United States after being granted asylum. This process typically takes two to five years for asylum seekers to settle in the United States.
The US Department of the Interior says more than 76,000 Afghans have been evacuated to the United States through “Allied Welcoming Operations” and 2,500 are ready to fly to the United States at transit points.
According to the report, the United States plans to resettle thousands of Afghan refugees at military bases by mid-February.
A White House official told Axius News that in addition to the 30-day process, the government is also looking at the 90-day and 120-day processes as ways to accelerate and innovate the US asylum process – not just for Afghans.
Among the Afghan refugees, about 10,000 are waiting at military bases, while the rest have been resettled in their new communities.
A White House official said that in total, the government plans to increase the evacuation process to 2,000 Afghans a month, half of whom will be holders or applicants for special immigration or SIV visas.