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DUBAI: Afghan refugees held in the United Arab Emirates for months since fleeing Afghanistan last year protested for a third day on Friday, calling for resettlement to the United States.
The demonstrations by hundreds of Afghans began https://www.wsj.com/articles/afghan-refugees-held-for-months-in-the-u-a-e-protest-the-conditions-11644511778 on Wednesday at the centre where they are being housed as months of frustrations with what refugees say is a lack of communication over the resettlement process boiled over.
A protestor told Reuters by phone more refugees had joined the protest on Friday, a day after a U.S. official visited the centre and told them it could take years for applications to be processed.
Many refugees, however, were unlikely to ever be resettled in the United States, the official told them, according to the protestor.
Ahmad Mohibi, an advocate who has helped Afghans evacuate, including to the UAE, and who is contact with several refugees there, said Afghans planned to continue peaceful protests.
The refugees, he said, were appreciative of the care the UAE has provided them but were exasperated by the uncertainty over how much longer they would have to remain at the Abu Dhabi centre.
The U.S. Embassy in Abu Dhabi and the Emirati government have not commented on the protests. The refugees have complained about prison-like conditions in the centre.
The UAE agreed with Washington and other Western countries last year to temporarily house Afghan nationals evacuated from Afghanistan as they made their way to a third country.
It is unclear how many Afghans refugees are being housed in the UAE, though demonstrators and advocates estimate there are 12,000 temporarily living at two locations in Abu Dhabi.
Afghans have protested outside a U.S. government representative office at one of the centres in Abu Dhabi, holding banners pleading for freedom and urging the U.S. to resettle them.
The U.S. is prioritising those with visas or applications but two sources familiar with cases of refugees in Abu Dhabi said most there had neither.
Advocates say while it is believed thousands of refugees there have a legal path to the United States, many others do not.
They say the refugees include people who had worked with the U.S. government, military and for Afghan forces before the withdrawal of Western forces last August. The Western-backed government collapsed and the hardline Islamist Taliban movement took over the country.
Mohibi said he was coordinating with other advocates and charities to raise the Afghans’ concerns directly with the U.S. government.
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