Khalid Payenda, who was once Afghanistan’s Finance serve, presently earns enough to pay the bills in Washington as a Uber driver, as per a report distributed in The Washington Post.
Payenda had surrendered after President Ashraf Ghani blew up at him in a public gathering, simply seven days before the Taliban held onto Kabul. He knew practically nothing about the public authority’s tumble to the Taliban. Payenda had felt that he had lost the trust of Ashraf Ghani and surrendered.
Talking about his everyday profit, the 40-year-old said that one night sooner this week, he made “somewhat more than $150 for six hours’ work, not including his drive an average evening”.
Subsequent to coming to the US, Payenda said that he was brought together with his loved ones. He had in Afghanistan once regulated the US-upheld $6 billion spending plan, as indicated by the air terminal.
Payenda let a traveler know that his move from Kabul to Washington had been “very much an adjustment”.Even after the months of the awful fall of Afghanistan, Payenda said that he has a hand in the responsibility with his kindred Afghans for the quick breakdown of the fairly chosen government.
“We didn’t have the group will to change, to be not kidding,” he said.
He likewise faulted the Americans for giving the country to the Taliban and double-crossing the getting through values that as far as anyone knows had enlivened their battle. “It eats at you inside,” he said.
“At this moment, I have no spot,” he said. “I don’t have a place here, and I don’t have a place there. It’s an exceptionally unfilled inclination.”
The Taliban last August assumed command over Afghanistan after President Joe Biden finished the 20-year military mission in Afghanistan.Tebbutt said she could never have recuperated without Hostage International, a cause that offers a help organization and to expert consideration, for nothing, to those impacted by hijacking or erratic detainment outside their nation of origin.
Established in 2004 by previous prisoner Terry Waite CBE and a gathering of previous prisoners and relatives, the free cause has upheld in excess of 370 cases – around 30 every year.
“I talked much of the time to Nazanin online when she was detained at home at her folks’ home,” said Waite. “I was shocked that I had the option to – that is never occurred before in the entirety of my time helping prisoners – however she and I had the option to invest heaps of energy talking and I did what I could to help her visit solid and keep up with trust.”
Tebbutt says that even with the assistance of Hostage International, it required her somewhere around five years after her delivery to start recuperating. “Before that, I was continually attempting to imagine I was OK,” she says. “David and I had an extraordinary coexistence and incredible retirement arranged out: our life resembled a little jigsaw puzzle with the pieces all perfectly located – and afterward somebody went along and just tossed the pieces all over. For a really long time, it seemed like I was searching for bits of David.
“Yet, I don’t have to search for those pieces any more,” she says, sitting straighter in her seat and shaking the hair out of her face. “I’m OK being me as a widow and me as a previous prisoner. It doesn’t characterize me any longer. I’m simply Jude. Pushing ahead, strolling forward constantly.”