Thank you, Mr. Chairman and the respective members of the Special Committee on Afghanistan, for giving us the opportunity to come here to discuss the problems we have with the IRCC and the Government of Canada.
I want to start with the fall of Kabul. The fall of Kabul was a devastating tragedy for all of us. That moment, watching it on TV, was the last hope that we were all losing. We lost. We failed to build a society where freedom and women's rights are respected, where everyone has an opportunity to be what they want, where the dreams of the young generation can be seen and where minorities have a voice. This pain will always be hunting us down, because we believed in it and we fought for it with the Canadian Forces, shoulder to shoulder. We were their eyes and ears on the ground. Many of our brethren and sisters died in these years, some on the front lines with the Canadian soldiers and some from assassination by the Taliban after their service.
The fall of Kabul was a devastating tragedy for all of us. It was a tragedy that puts all our families at risk. It was a risk that none of our families took part in, but they are there because of our enduring relationship with the Canadian Armed Forces and its civilian mission in Afghanistan.
Look at us now. We're here talking about a life-and-death situation. We're asking the Canadian public, we're asking lawmakers, we're asking parliamentarians and we're asking the government officials to listen to us. Listen to our concerns. Listen to our cries. We are in desperate need of saving our families. They are all hiding, one way or another, moving from one house to another house. People have been chased down. People's homes are being searched. It is a dire situation.
Most of the families are starving. We are all living in fear that this is the last day they will see. We are here because of our enduring relationship with Canada. None of our families deserved this.
The Taliban have done multiple killings of anyone considered a traitor. This knot is now getting tighter, as they enter and search houses of suspected family members of those who worked with NATO or ISAF forces. Many have burned the paperwork that connects our families to Canada. First-hand reports paint a sad situation. Valuables are being taken, leaving them no choice but to starve. Taliban are physically assaulting not only the men but also the women of the family members of the former interpreters.
These are true stories. I personally know two former interpreters in British Columbia. They are very close to me. The Taliban went to their houses and took their valuables, cars and motorcycles. They showed no mercy to the men and women, physically assaulting the latter, which is unheard of in Afghan society.
The Taliban justify the redistribution of wealth and valuables from former interpreters and the people who worked with NATO and ISAF forces, because they say that this money or property was earned through illegal means, and since they are fighting the jihad, that wealth can be taken by force.
We receive phone calls from former interpreters. They cry their hearts out to us as their members and their representatives. They ask us to save their families. The answer, of course, is, no, we can't save anyone; we don't have any power in our hands.
We ask our Prime Minister, we ask the Minister at IRCC, and we ask the honourable parliamentarians to help us in this matter. We're doing what we can with multiple protests. We organized two hunger strikes. We provided IRCC with consolidated lists with our families' names and information. We submitted the necessary paperwork when the government opened the web portal for our families on December 9, 2021.
We have had 29 meetings so far with IRCC officials. I'll talk about what we have received so far. This will take only one more minute, I promise, and then I will finish.
What did we receive? We received a promise of urgent processing; a promise to bring families to Canada, starting in the first quarter of 2022; a promise to get UCI numbers; and a promise to work with third countries to bring our families safely to Canada.
Promises are what we have gotten.
No families have arrived. Zero members of our family have arrived. Sixty-five per cent—