IN LATE SEPTEMBER 2021, Firas, his wife and four-month-old son have been checked into a smart business hotel in London. With green velvet sofas in the lobby and pink orchids at reception, it seems designed to bathe visitors in an atmosphere of corporate calm; in sharp contrast, Firas, 32, a former guard at the British embassy in Kabul, exudes a jangling, nervous sense of distress. Six weeks after a dramatic evacuation from Afghanistan, he remains so shaken that he wakes most nights at 3am and paces the hotel corridors in tears. “ I can’t concentrate on my new life. I’m too worried about the people I’ve left behind,” he says, bent over a table, head in his hands.
A few miles away in another part of south London, Ali, 35, who spent eight years working as a programme and finance manager with the UK’s Department for International Development (D fID) in Afghanistan, is isolating inside one room of a quarantine hotel with his wife Zohrab, his nine-year-old daughter and his two sons, aged six and five. A Taliban death threat forced Ali to flee to London a year before his wife and children were evacuated in August 2021, and their recent reunion in this small room overlooking the Thames was incredibly emotional. “My kids were jumping all over me. I was just so relieved that they were safe,” Ali says. He found them dehydrated and hungry, still wearing the clothes they had left home in. The room is crowded, and the children are sleeping on the floor. They spend their days examining their new home out of the hotel window and finding enormous enjoyment in mimicking the unfamiliar words their father uses when he calls reception. “They find it so funny. They tease me, copying my voice, saying, ‘Good morning’ to each other.”
Denne historien er fra April 01, 2022-utgaven av The Guardian Weekly.
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Denne historien er fra April 01, 2022-utgaven av The Guardian Weekly.
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