LONDON: The UK must accept more refugees from Afghanistan and show greater compassion toward people fleeing the Taliban, the UN special rapporteur for Afghanistan told The Independent.
Richard Bennett’s appeal came almost four years since the Taliban takeover of the country, with Afghan women and girls having suffered under a series of draconian restrictions since 2021.
Afghans are coming to the UK “because they are persecuted and life is very hard for them,” he said: “Nobody wants to be a refugee.”
Under a Home Office scheme for vulnerable Afghans, Britain pledged to accept 20,000 refugees from the country over a five-year period.
Figures from December showed that 34,940 people had arrived from Afghanistan, with almost 26,000 having been given accommodation.
Due to the risk of Taliban reprisals, many refugees resorted to reaching the UK via small boat from Europe.
Bennett, who was banned by the Taliban from entering Afghanistan last year, said: “They are refugees who have been persecuted in a war and now by an oppressive regime. They are truly the classic definition of a refugee.”
He added: “I come from New Zealand, and we had a prime minister who asked people to be kind. So, that’s what I would do, too — to be kind to Afghan refugees, please.”
Bennett has produced several reports detailing the suffering of Afghan women and minorities since his appointment to the UN Human Rights Council in 2022.
The Taliban accused the UN’s findings last year of being “based on prejudices and anecdotes detrimental to interests of Afghanistan and Afghans.”
At the recent Herat Security Dialogue in Spain, Bennett described the situation of women and girls in Afghanistan as “hell.”
There are women “tortured in prison, sometimes sexually abused, beaten and threatened,” he told The Independent, adding that the UN’s rights authorities are trying to “understand the scale and the gravity of the Taliban’s rule.”
He highlighted the Taliban’s latest edicts, including one banning women from appearing near uncovered windows.
“It shows how women and girls are not considered the equal of men and boys, but rather inferior human beings. This is not a situation that any country, any other country can accept in the 21st century,” he said.
Since retaking power in Afghanistan, the Taliban has banned most girls aged over 12 from formal education.
Women have also been barred from parks and prevented from traveling long distances without a male guardian.
The Taliban’s positions on women’s rights is undermining its attempts to gain international recognition, with no country having established formal ties with Afghanistan.
The US and UK should only engage with the Taliban on condition that “measurable improvements” are seen in human rights practices, Bennett said.
“Use that leverage that the international community has — be it political or financial or sanctions — a range of actions can put pressure on the Taliban. And to be clear, I am not against dialogue,” he added.
“I have always been for dialogue, and the US and the UK need to consistently raise their concerns about human rights when they engage with the Taliban — not skirt around or avoid it.”