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US Negotiating To Resettle 1,100 Afghans In DR Congo

US Negotiating To Resettle 1,100 Afghans In DR Congo

The Trump administration is in talks with the Democratic Republic of Congo to resettle 1,100 Afghans who have been stranded in Qatar awaiting U.S. visas.

The discussions underscore the legal hurdles facing Afghans who fled the ‌Taliban after U.S. immigrant visa processing for Afghan nationals was effectively halted, leaving them in limbo more than four years after the U.S. withdrawal from Kabul.

Shawn VanDiver, founder and president of #AfghanEvac, a coalition of veterans and advocacy groups, said that U.S. officials had briefed him about the plan to resettle the Afghans in Congo, which he described as unacceptable, partly because of chronic insecurity in the central African country.

The Afghans are housed at Camp As Sayliyah, a former U.S. Army base in Qatar, where they were transferred to complete immigrant visa processing for entry into the United States. Some ⁠are relatives of U.S. citizens or worked for a U.S.-funded organization during the 20-year war.

But that processing ground to a halt after the Trump administration took office in January 2025.

Last June, the Trump administration included Afghanistan on a list of 12 countries subject to a travel ban, with a narrow exemption for Special Immigrant Visas (SIV) for Afghans who served alongside troops and diplomats.

In November, Washington stopped immigrant visa processing for all Afghan nationals following the deadly shooting of two U.S. National Guard members by an Afghan former CIA-backed paramilitary unit member.

A federal judge ruled in February that the ban on Afghan SIV visa processing was illegal, but processing is effectively at a standstill.

A State Department spokesperson said in an email late on Tuesday that resettling the Afghans in a third country would be a positive solution that would give them a chance to ‌start a ⁠new life outside of Afghanistan.

Esther Ndu

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