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Afghans flee Taliban packed in cars, traffickers offer help, hope of new life

Afghans flee Taliban packed in cars, traffickers offer help, hope of new life

With the stopgap of a new life and work, Afghans continue to leave their country, now ruled by the Taliban, in packed buses. They’re supposedly getting help from mortal merchandisers. The remote city of Zaranj, close to the border of Pakistan and Iran, has come a major mecca for the trafficking of willing Afghans.

A report by the BBC showed how hopeless Afghan families are fleeing the country– facing a massive philanthropic and profitable extremity. They’re readily turning up to mortal merchandisers.

The report shows buses having 18-20 people bearing a seven-hour trip from Zaranj through the desert to Pakistan. Similar people are smuggled across Iran.

Merchandisers told the BBC that the number of Afghans leaving the country has doubled since the Taliban preemption.
Afghans have chosen this as an easy way out of the country as there’s no immigration and need for visas. The merchandisers just need to pay a small figure to the Taliban.

Utmost of these people are hopeless men who are fleeing the country in the stopgap of chancing employment away.
Sitting in one of the buses, a woman with a child in her arms said she used to be a schoolteacher under the former government in Afghanistan. She said,”I haven’t entered my payment for the last two months. I’m helpless. What can I give my children to eat?

The city of Zaranj, where it’s operating openly, depicts the despair of Afghans to flee the country. The country’s frugality has collapsed and only a many have faith in the Taliban government.
The Taliban are charging a figure of$ 10 or$ 11 per truck. They said the heightening profitable extremity and freezing of foreign finances is making it insolvable to stop people from fleeing.

One Taliban dogface said,”The problem is that Afghanistan’s frugality

Analogous scenes were witnessed at the Kabul transnational field soon after the Taliban preemption when Afghans flocked the field and contended with authorities to allow them to board evacuation aeroplanes to flee the country.

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