For example, at the beginning we explained to the IRCC that some of our families have Afghan passports, but some don't; and some have birth certificates, but some don't, because we didn't think that the Government of Afghanistan would fall.
They said, “You guys do not need passports,” and then at the last meeting, after the hunger strike we had at Parliament Hill, they told us, “If you guys can, you guys should get passports. Without a passport to travel to Pakistan or any other country, it will be difficult for us to get you out of there.”
We told them that you, the IRCC, promised us and promised the public that if a case number or an applicant made it to a third country, they should then contact IRCC, which would then help to take them out of that country. If you go to the Taliban and ask for a family passport, the first question they ask you is, “Why do you need a passport for every single member of your family? Who did you work for? Did you have a relationship with any foreign NATO members?” They start targeting and investigating you.
This is one of the examples.