Rejected by New Zealand, pregnant reporter turns to Taliban for help
WELLINGTON, JAN 30: A pregnant
New Zealand journalist says she turned to the Taliban for help and is now
stranded in Afghanistan after her home country has prevented her from returning
due to a bottleneck of people in its coronavirus quarantine system.
In a column published in The New
Zealand Herald on Saturday, Charlotte Bellis said it was brutally ironic that
she’d once questioned the Taliban about their treatment of women and she was
now asking the same questions of her own government.
When the Taliban offers you a
pregnant, unmarried woman safe haven, you know your situation is messed up,
Bellis wrote in her column.
New Zealand’s Covid-19 Response Minister Chris Hipkins told the Herald his office had asked officials to check whether they followed the proper procedures in Bellis’s case, which appeared at first sight to warrant further explanation.
New Zealand has managed to keep
the spread of the virus to a minimum during the pandemic and has reported just
52 virus deaths among its population of 5 million.
But the nation’s requirement that
even returning citizens spend 10 days isolating in quarantine hotels run by the
military has led to a backlog of thousands of people wanting to return home
vying for spots.
Stories of citizens stranded
abroad in dire circumstances have caused embarrassment for Prime Minister
Jacinda Ardern and her government, but Bellis’s situation is particularly
striking.
Last year, she was working for Al
Jazeera covering the withdrawal of American troops from Afghanistan when she
gained international attention by questioning Taliban leaders about their
treatment of women and girls.
In her column Saturday, Bellis
said she returned to Qatar in September and discovered she was pregnant with
her partner, freelance photographer Jim Huylebroek, a contributor to The New
York Times.
She described the pregnancy as a
miracle after earlier being told by doctors she couldn’t have children. She is
due to give birth to a girl in May.
Extramarital sex is illegal in
Qatar and Bellis said she realized she needed to leave. She repeatedly tried to
get back to New Zealand in a lottery-style system for returning citizens but
without success.
She said she resigned from Al
Jazeera in November and the couple moved to Huylebroek’s native Belgium. But
she couldn’t stay long, she said, because she wasn’t a resident. She said the
only other place the couple had visas to live was Afghanistan.
Bellis said she spoke with senior
Taliban contacts who told her she would be fine if she returned to Afghanistan.
Just tell people you’re married
and if it escalates, call us. Don’t worry, Bellis said they told her.
She said she sent 59 documents to
New Zealand authorities in Afghanistan but they rejected her application for an
emergency return.
Chris Bunny, the joint head of
New Zealand’s Managed Isolation and Quarantine system, told the Herald that
Bellis’s emergency application didn’t fit a requirement that she travel within
14 days.
He said staff had reached out to
Bellis about making another application that would fit within the requirements.
This is not uncommon and is an example of the team being helpful to New Zealanders who are in distressing situations, Bunny wrote.
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Courtesy Dawn News
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