May 5, 2024
‘We found our home again,’ Afghan man says after family arrives on charter flight to Manitoba | CBC News

‘We found our home again,’ Afghan man says after family arrives on charter flight to Manitoba | CBC News

An Afghan man whose family arrived in Manitoba this week says they’re grateful to finally be in Canada after years of living in fear of the Taliban.

“I told [my] family that we found our home again,” Azizullah Mahdi said in a phone interview on Friday, after landing with his wife and their seven children at the Winnipeg Richardson International Airport Wednesday morning.

The chartered flight from Pakistan transported 256 Afghan nationals, including people who supported Canada’s mission in Afghanistan, family members of former interpreters and privately sponsored refugees arriving through the humanitarian stream, Jeffrey MacDonald, a spokesperson for Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, said in an email.

The newcomers will be resettled in roughly 25 communities across Canada, including Winnipeg, Edmonton, Toronto and Ottawa. It’s part of the federal government’s commitment to resettle at least 40,000 Afghans in Canada — which MacDonald said the country is on track to meet by the end of 2023.

Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan and its largest city, fell to the Taliban on Aug. 15, 2021. The country has since faced a humanitarian crisis, with millions of people struggling to find food, while women and girls have lost basic rights.

Mahdi said he and his wife, Fatima Amiri, were both in danger because they worked in human rights, and because he belongs to the country’s minority Hazara community. They moved from their home in Ghor, an Afghan province, to the larger city of Kabul to avoid detection by the Taliban, then last year moved again to Pakistan in the hopes of getting a flight to Canada.

“We were worried a lot. Our family and my parents, they were worried a lot because our life was not safe. So we were trying to find a solution, how to get out,” he said.

Mahdi said his family waited more than seven months before their chance finally came this week, after several cancelled flights last month. He said it was a relief to see the end of a stressful time in his family’s lives, including his children, who range in age from a toddler to a 17-year-old.

“We already knew that Canada is the home of everybody, and Canada is the home of those who have no home in their country,” he said. “That’s why I come here, to find my right country.”

Mahdi’s family is now among those settling in the southwestern city of Brandon, where he said he and his wife are looking forward to getting involved in human rights work locally and becoming “active and responsible” members of the community.

Meanwhile, he said he hopes the federal government can help the rest of his family get to Canada — including his parents and siblings, and his wife’s family, who fled to India after the 2019 death of Amiri’s brother at the hands of the Taliban.

Newcomers heading to Brandon, Winnipeg

Boris Ntambwe, a resettlement program manager who works with Winnipeg settlement service Accueil francophone, said 67 of the latest Afghans to land in Winnipeg will stay in Manitoba — with 21 of them heading to the southwestern city of Brandon and the rest staying in the capital city.

“They’re doing fine. They were happy, you know — we have the reception centre, and they’ve been taken to a hotel where they had a buffet breakfast offered to them. They’re all happy and excited,” Ntambwe said hours after the flight landed on Wednesday.

Smiling man stands in arrivals area of Winnipeg airport.
Boris Ntambwe, a resettlement and housing manager for Accueil Francophone, says 67 of the latest Afghan arrivals plan on staying in Manitoba. (Karen Pauls/CBC)

“It was quiet today. It was not stressful like other charter flights. Everything went smooth.”

Ntambwe said Accueil francophone has now been involved with four charter flights bringing Afghan nationals to Winnipeg, and will work with those staying in the city.

Westman Immigrant Services community outreach manager Hannah Holt said her organization is working with those destined for Brandon, helping them with housing, setting up things like bank accounts, social insurance numbers, health cards and Canada child benefits and finding resources like English classes and employment.

“We’re getting them sorted into accommodation and just basically getting their lives established in their new community,” Holt said on Friday, adding for some that also means helping them connect with their religious community.

A woman stands outside in front of a sign that says Westman Immigrant Services
Westman Immigrant Services program outreach manager Hannah Holt says her organization will be working with the Afghans destined for Brandon. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

“Once people generally get established [in] a community, it makes settlement and integration a lot easier because you don’t feel so isolated and you don’t feel so alone. And there’s all of a sudden this network of people that you can get to know.”

More than 34,000 Afghans have arrived in Canada since August 2021, including more than 500 in Winnipeg, over 100 in Brandon and about two dozen in Winkler, the federal government’s website says.

Federal spokesperson MacDonald said that includes people who have come on 29 chartered flights from Pakistan to Canada, on top of hundreds of refugees who have travelled on commercial flights from Pakistan.

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