Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Politics
Mark Rutte
afghanistan
Taliban
Afghan ambassador
Sigrid Kaag
interpreters
Dutch embassy Afghanistan
asylum
Sunday, 15 August 2021 - 10:30

Share this article:

Give Afghans who helped the Netherlands asylum, ambassador says as Taliban advances

While the Dutch military was in Afghanistan, they engaged 273 Afghans as interpreters. They now need the help of the Netherlands in the form of asylum, Afghan ambassador in the Netherlands Mohammad Asif Rahimi said to Nieuwsuur on Friday.

On Sunday morning, the Taliban started their attack on the Afghan capital, Kabul. It has been the last major city in Afghanistan that was not yet in the hands of the Taliban. The terrorist organization has also claimed all Afghan border crossings, the Pakistani minister of interior affairs said.

The terrorist organization sees Afghans who helped the Netherlands and other Western countries as traitors.

“Everything is being done in the Dutch embassy in Kabul to help our employees, interpreters, their relatives and direct family”, Minister of Foreign Affairs Sigrid Kaag tweeted on Saturday.

https://twitter.com/ministerBZ/status/1426632108341145611

Prime Minister Mark Rutte also announced on Twitter that everything is being done to ensure the safety of the embassy workers and interpreters.

https://twitter.com/MinPres/status/1426593505707761668

Interpreters are entitled to asylum as long as they are able to verify their function, yet that is enough the Afghan ambassador said. “Interpreters, drivers, office workers and anyone on the military base who worked for the Netherlands, they all helped the Netherlands in their mission”, Rahimi said. “If they are in danger and they have the correct documents, they should have the possibility to come to the Netherlands.”

Even for interpreters, it can be difficult at times to get asylum in the Netherlands. Many applicants are not in possession of identity documents, such as a birth certificate or an ID card. Around 100 interpreters already moved to the Netherlands after the Taliban advanced in the region.

More like this

Image
Dutch embassy
Court orders Dutch state to bring 42 Afghan embassy guards to Netherlands
Image
Afghanistan flags wave over an anti-Taliban rally in Rotterdam. August 21, 2021
Netherlands to grant asylum to most Afghan women and girls under new policy
Image
Afghanistan flags wave over an anti-Taliban rally in Rotterdam. August 21, 2021
Four Afghan women granted asylum in the Netherlands after earlier rejections
Image
Three Afghan women and a young boy standing outside a shoe store in Kabul, Afghanistan. The women are wearing blue burqas (burkas).
Asylum service grants Afghan woman protection after report details Taliban restrictions
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Nearly 100 exotic animals found in contaminated, overheated enclosures; Man arrested
  • Fries Museum delays major silver exhibition over security concerns
  • Unilever to build $270 million research center in the U.S. amid Dutch restructuring
  • Arne Slot, Dutch manager of Liverpool FC, fired after disappointing second season
  • Venlo man who escaped Roermond hospital custody arrested in Düsseldorf

Top stories

  • Lightning storms ignite multiple house fires, paralyze rail travel across Netherlands
  • New Amsterdam-Paris train from €19 will stop in Haarlem, The Hague, Roosendaal & Gent
  • Police arrest 35-year-old man after youth soccer leader found dead in Herpen ditch
  • Urgent Code Orange warning issued as heavy storms hit eastern Netherlands
  • Prosecutors target alleged drug profits of former Oranje international Quincy Promes

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content