Dubai Telegraph - Families forever scarred 4 years on from Kabul plane deaths

EUR -
AED 4.311612
AFN 77.565377
ALL 96.656855
AMD 447.600202
ANG 2.10198
AOA 1076.581534
ARS 1691.478308
AUD 1.765918
AWG 2.113247
AZN 2.01835
BAM 1.954927
BBD 2.360846
BDT 143.246058
BGN 1.954927
BHD 0.440503
BIF 3464.553505
BMD 1.174026
BND 1.513824
BOB 8.099385
BRL 6.362867
BSD 1.172177
BTN 106.003682
BWP 15.531067
BYN 3.455558
BYR 23010.908476
BZD 2.357448
CAD 1.616643
CDF 2629.818358
CHF 0.934639
CLF 0.027241
CLP 1068.656894
CNY 8.282164
CNH 8.28179
COP 4464.207284
CRC 586.338272
CUC 1.174026
CUP 31.111687
CVE 110.215802
CZK 24.26806
DJF 208.736825
DKK 7.469934
DOP 74.516737
DZD 151.543355
EGP 55.577962
ERN 17.610389
ETB 183.151046
FJD 2.667147
FKP 0.877594
GBP 0.877448
GEL 3.180196
GGP 0.877594
GHS 13.455994
GIP 0.877594
GMD 85.703785
GNF 10194.449439
GTQ 8.977992
GYD 245.230535
HKD 9.139264
HNL 30.860225
HRK 7.534546
HTG 153.641418
HUF 384.603841
IDR 19528.454024
ILS 3.783645
IMP 0.877594
INR 106.348557
IQD 1535.514583
IRR 49452.902642
ISK 148.402175
JEP 0.877594
JMD 187.676226
JOD 0.832394
JPY 183.001239
KES 151.152529
KGS 102.668504
KHR 4692.905198
KMF 492.51368
KPW 1056.619069
KRW 1731.582749
KWD 0.360073
KYD 0.976864
KZT 611.327118
LAK 25411.656839
LBP 104967.345065
LKR 362.198323
LRD 206.88765
LSL 19.776072
LTL 3.466593
LVL 0.710156
LYD 6.367158
MAD 10.783786
MDL 19.815155
MGA 5192.68211
MKD 61.522538
MMK 2465.245374
MNT 4163.064053
MOP 9.399304
MRU 46.91006
MUR 53.910734
MVR 18.074307
MWK 2032.592699
MXN 21.156206
MYR 4.810333
MZN 75.032113
NAD 19.776072
NGN 1705.354848
NIO 43.140743
NOK 11.89627
NPR 169.606292
NZD 2.024882
OMR 0.449269
PAB 1.172177
PEN 3.946438
PGK 5.052745
PHP 69.402543
PKR 328.499066
PLN 4.223365
PYG 7873.485463
QAR 4.271993
RON 5.090456
RSD 117.327628
RUB 93.59064
RWF 1706.038465
SAR 4.405178
SBD 9.599718
SCR 17.642061
SDG 706.203215
SEK 10.890253
SGD 1.516524
SHP 0.880824
SLE 28.323378
SLL 24618.741306
SOS 668.701507
SRD 45.256347
STD 24299.966664
STN 24.489069
SVC 10.256422
SYP 12980.992867
SZL 19.769176
THB 37.093387
TJS 10.772192
TMT 4.120831
TND 3.42667
TOP 2.826773
TRY 50.124839
TTD 7.954449
TWD 36.788219
TZS 2901.105015
UAH 49.527192
UGX 4166.140334
USD 1.174026
UYU 45.999467
UZS 14121.696409
VES 313.981204
VND 30883.926447
VUV 141.687325
WST 3.258488
XAF 655.664327
XAG 0.01895
XAU 0.000273
XCD 3.172863
XCG 2.112557
XDR 0.815436
XOF 655.664327
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.008712
ZAR 19.813126
ZMK 10567.643175
ZMW 27.047926
ZWL 378.035875
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.17

    0%

  • BCC

    0.2500

    76.51

    +0.33%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    23.25

    -0.65%

  • AZN

    -0.4600

    89.83

    -0.51%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    48.81

    -0.14%

  • BCE

    0.3100

    23.71

    +1.31%

  • NGG

    0.2400

    74.93

    +0.32%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.3

    -0.56%

  • RIO

    -1.0800

    75.66

    -1.43%

  • BTI

    -1.2700

    57.1

    -2.22%

  • RELX

    0.1000

    40.38

    +0.25%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2500

    14.6

    -1.71%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.7

    -0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    12.59

    +0.4%

  • BP

    -0.2700

    35.26

    -0.77%

Families forever scarred 4 years on from Kabul plane deaths
Families forever scarred 4 years on from Kabul plane deaths / Photo: Ahmad SAHEL ARMAN - AFP

Families forever scarred 4 years on from Kabul plane deaths

The day after the Taliban stormed into the Afghan capital in August 2021, Afghans desperate to evacuate clung to the fuselage of a departing American plane at Kabul airport -- only to fall to their deaths.

Text size:

Four years later, their families still relive those desperate acts and endure wounds they say will never heal.

The images sped around the world: hundreds of people running alongside a military plane about to take off, with some clinging to it.

Other videos show figures falling from the C-17, plummeting through the air.

One of them was Shafiullah Hotak.

Aged 18, he dreamt of becoming a doctor, but lacking the money for his studies, was forced to work doing odd jobs.

On August 16, 2021, the day after the Taliban seized Kabul, Hotak was swept up by rumours that the departing Americans, after 20 years of war, were taking with them Afghans eager to flee.

"I'm leaving for the United States!" he told his parents at dawn that day, with only 50 Afghanis (less than a dollar today) in his pocket.

The airport was swarmed with families clutching any scrap of paper they thought might help them leave with the swiftly departing foreigners.

"Shafiullah had hope. He said that if he made it to the United States, I could stop working, that he would repay us for everything we had done for him," recalled his mother, Zar Bibi Hotak.

"I gave him his ID card and he left. Then we heard he was dead."

- Fell to their deaths -

More than 120,000 people were evacuated in August 2021 by NATO countries, including 2,000 who had directly worked with the organisation against the Taliban.

Thousands of others left the country in the following months.

"We were told stories about the previous Taliban regime, how even flour was hard to find," said Intizar Hotak, Shafiullah's 29-year-old brother, referring to the Taliban's first rule in 1996-2001.

"With those stories in mind, we were worried. We thought there would be no more work."

In the eastern Kabul neighbourhood where they live, crisscrossed by foul-smelling drainage channels, the only people who managed to get by were those with family sending money from abroad.

"Shafiullah said the situation wouldn't improve, that it was better to leave," his mother said, clinging to a portrait of the young man with neatly combed hair and piercing eyes, posing next to a rose bush.

His body landed on the roof of a house in northern Kabul, a few kilometres (miles) from the airport.

So did that of 24-year-old Fida Mohammad Amir, who according to his father Payanda Mohammad Ibrahimi, hated the Taliban.

On August 16, he pretended to have an appointment at his dental clinic and left the family home in Paghman, a quiet village west of Kabul.

Later that morning his family tried to reach him.

When the phone finally rang early in the afternoon, a stranger claiming to be at the airport asked, "Do you know Fida? He fell from a plane."

The young dentist had slipped his father's number into his pocket -- just in case.

- 'I didn't understand anything' -

Zar Bibi Hotak was alerted by relatives who saw a photo of Shafiullah shared on Facebook by witnesses at the airport.

"I screamed, I ran like a madwoman. Some neighbours were embarrassed, unsure how to react. Another grabbed me and brought me back home," she said.

To this day, the number of those who died during the evacuation remains unknown.

In 2022, the US military cleared the plane's crew of wrongdoing.

The crew had "decided to depart the airfield as quickly as possible" due to a deteriorating security situation as "the aircraft was surrounded by hundreds of Afghan civilians who had breached the airport perimeter", according to a spokesperson.

It's not enough, said all the families interviewed by AFP, who said their grief was only made worse by the lack of accountability.

"No one has called us -- not the previous government, not the Taliban, not the Americans," said Zar Bibi Hotak.

"The planes have cameras... the pilot knew what he was doing, that it was dangerous, he could have stopped," said Zakir Anwari, whose brother Zaki was crushed by the plane on the tarmac.

A promising football player at 17 years old, Zaki went to the airport out of curiosity with another of his brothers.

But in seeing the crowd, he decided to take his chances, Anwari believes.

"Everyone wondered how Zaki, so smart, took such a risk. But he wasn't the only one: I met at the airport a father of six who proudly said he had tried three times to climb onto a plane," Anwari said.

At the airport, where he rushed to try to find his brother, he recalled bodies piled into a pickup, blood on the ground, and being struck by a Taliban fighter.

"I had nightmares for a year. Impossible to forget," he said.

F.A.Dsouza--DT