Afghan Anniversary: The Day Kabul Fell – Eyewitness Accounts – Shabnam Salehi USAGM
Metadata
- Afghan Anniversary: The Day Kabul Fell – Eyewitness Accounts – Shabnam Salehi USAGM
- August 7, 2022
- Content Type Package
- Language English
- Transcript/Script English USAGM SHARE ((PLAYBOOK SLUG: Afghan Anniversary: The Day Kabul Fell – Eyewitness Accounts – Shabnam Salehi HEADLINE: Afghan Human Rights Activist Recounts the Day Kabul Fell PUBLISHED AT: 8/5/2022 AT 11:15AM BYLINE: Roshan Noorzai, Bezhan Hamdard, Ayesha Tanzeem DATELINE: Ottawa, Canada VIDEOGRAPHER: Bezhan Hamdard VIDEO EDITOR: Bezhan Hamdard VIDEO SOURCE (S): VOA Original | SCA Division SCRIPT EDITORS: Bowman, Reifenrath TRT: 2:42 VID APPROVED BY: MAS TYPE: TVPKG EDITOR NOTES: This is a self-narrated video)) ((EDS: Hold For Release within a window from 8/10-8/20)) [[NOTE: AFGHAN ANNIVERSARY SERIES: This is one of four TV self-narrated TV packages of eyewitnesses recalling the day Kabul fell to the Taliban. They are part of a special VOA series marking the one-year anniversary of the Taliban's return to power in Afghanistan on August 15, 2021. The series also includes stories of Afghan refugees around the world, and data-based analysis of the Taliban's record of governance and human rights, among other topics.]] ((INTRO)) [[Anyone who was in Afghanistan a year ago has vivid memories of the Taliban’s swift conquest of the country as the last U.S. forces withdrew. Shabnam Salehi, a former chief of a women's protection unit in Afghanistan and a member of the country's Human Rights Commission, which the Taliban dissolved in May, shares her experience of the fall of Kabul.]] ((Shabnam Salehi, Former Afghanistan Human Rights Commission Member)) ((Female in Pashto)) I was in Afghanistan on August 15th, and I saw the Taliban's return in person. ((OPENING GRAPHICS)) I am Shabnam Salehi, [former] Afghanistan Human Rights Commission's women's department chief and a [former] Kabul University professor. It was around 11 a.m. when our security chief entered my office and said, "It would be best if you left the office." I left the commission's office with my driver and bodyguard. At one point, we found ourselves within 10 to 15 meters of members of the Taliban who were hoisting their white flags. We were in a government vehicle. My driver was telling me to get out because the vehicle was a target [of Taliban militants]. Given the situation, my mother was very worried. She kept calling me and asking me where I was. I kept telling her that I hadn't moved. She kept asking if I was OK or if I was in danger, and I told her I was fine. She asked me to swear that I was OK and to promise to come home soon. The last time she called, I told her that I was turning off my phone because friends had told me they [the Taliban] might find me by tracking my phone. This could be the last time we speak. Saying this to my mom, I think, was the hardest thing I’ve done in my life. When I got home, my grandmother who raised me screamed when she saw me, and I screamed back. And I had this feeling that life had ended and that we had lost everything. On the 23rd, the 24th, pretty much for three straight days, we went to different gates of the [Kabul] airport but couldn’t get in. After 30 hours, we finally succeeded in entering the airport. At around 8 p.m., our flight was ready, and we were about to fly, but we had no idea where to. Until that time, I had no idea where I was headed. Even though I had evacuation letters from four different countries, I didn't know where I was going. People were crying in the airplane about leaving their homeland. Someone had taken some [Afghan] soil with them, and others were talking about their homeland. We arrived in Albania. It’s a country in Eastern Europe. I felt everything had slipped through my hands. We had nothing, and now we were homeless. I felt that I would never be able to go back home. On October 14, 2021, I came to Canada. [[VOA ENDCARD – A FREE PRESS MATTERS]] [[headline]]
- Transcript/Script USAGM SHARE ((PLAYBOOK SLUG: Afghan Anniversary: The Day Kabul Fell – Eyewitness Accounts – Shabnam Salehi HEADLINE: Afghan Human Rights Activist Recounts the Day Kabul Fell PUBLISHED AT: 8/5/2022 AT 11:15AM BYLINE: Roshan Noorzai, Bezhan Hamdard, Ayesha Tanzeem DATELINE: Ottawa, Canada VIDEOGRAPHER: Bezhan Hamdard VIDEO EDITOR: Bezhan Hamdard VIDEO SOURCE (S): VOA Original | SCA Division SCRIPT EDITORS: Bowman, Reifenrath TRT: 2:42 VID APPROVED BY: MAS TYPE: TVPKG EDITOR NOTES: This is a self-narrated video)) ((EDS: Hold For Release within a window from 8/10-8/20)) [[NOTE: AFGHAN ANNIVERSARY SERIES: This is one of four TV self-narrated TV packages of eyewitnesses recalling the day Kabul fell to the Taliban. They are part of a special VOA series marking the one-year anniversary of the Taliban's return to power in Afghanistan on August 15, 2021. The series also includes stories of Afghan refugees around the world, and data-based analysis of the Taliban's record of governance and human rights, among other topics.]] ((INTRO)) [[Anyone who was in Afghanistan a year ago has vivid memories of the Taliban’s swift conquest of the country as the last U.S. forces withdrew. Shabnam Salehi, a former chief of a women's protection unit in Afghanistan and a member of the country's Human Rights Commission, which the Taliban dissolved in May, shares her experience of the fall of Kabul.]] ((Shabnam Salehi, Former Afghanistan Human Rights Commission Member)) ((Female in Pashto)) I was in Afghanistan on August 15th, and I saw the Taliban's return in person. ((OPENING GRAPHICS)) I am Shabnam Salehi, [former] Afghanistan Human Rights Commission's women's department chief and a [former] Kabul University professor. It was around 11 a.m. when our security chief entered my office and said, "It would be best if you left the office." I left the commission's office with my driver and bodyguard. At one point, we found ourselves within 10 to 15 meters of members of the Taliban who were hoisting their white flags. We were in a government vehicle. My driver was telling me to get out because the vehicle was a target [of Taliban militants]. Given the situation, my mother was very worried. She kept calling me and asking me where I was. I kept telling her that I hadn't moved. She kept asking if I was OK or if I was in danger, and I told her I was fine. She asked me to swear that I was OK and to promise to come home soon. The last time she called, I told her that I was turning off my phone because friends had told me they [the Taliban] might find me by tracking my phone. This could be the last time we speak. Saying this to my mom, I think, was the hardest thing I’ve done in my life. When I got home, my grandmother who raised me screamed when she saw me, and I screamed back. And I had this feeling that life had ended and that we had lost everything. On the 23rd, the 24th, pretty much for three straight days, we went to different gates of the [Kabul] airport but couldn’t get in. After 30 hours, we finally succeeded in entering the airport. At around 8 p.m., our flight was ready, and we were about to fly, but we had no idea where to. Until that time, I had no idea where I was headed. Even though I had evacuation letters from four different countries, I didn't know where I was going. People were crying in the airplane about leaving their homeland. Someone had taken some [Afghan] soil with them, and others were talking about their homeland. We arrived in Albania. It’s a country in Eastern Europe. I felt everything had slipped through my hands. We had nothing, and now we were homeless. I felt that I would never be able to go back home. On October 14, 2021, I came to Canada. [[VOA ENDCARD – A FREE PRESS MATTERS]] [[headline]]
- NewsML Media Topics Arts, Culture, Entertainment and Media
- Network VOA
- Embargo Date August 7, 2022 10:19 EDT
- Byline Roshan Noorzai, Bezhan Hamdard, Ayesha Tanzeem
- Brand / Language Service Voice of America