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We tried to get these people out of Afghanistan. They’re still there.

Technically, Malik Jan Zadran worked as a driver, helping Christian Science Monitor correspondents get to the far-flung corners of Afghanistan after the fall of the Taliban. But really, he was a first line of security.  

“If we planned to go to a province where the security was not good, my job was to do due diligence – talk to villagers, do my research,” he says. 

Why We Wrote This

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Afghan colleagues who helped the Monitor report in Afghanistan for 20 years put their trust in us and in the United States. Now, some still can’t get out. They’re hoping something can change.

Now, with the Taliban back, he is sitting in hiding, with no job, no way to feed his family, and his son killed because of the father’s connection to an American, Christian newspaper. “If we catch another son, we will kill him,” those threatening Mr. Zadran by phone still say. “We will behead you.”

Amid the United States’ chaotic exit from Afghanistan in 2021, the Monitor was able to help some of its colleagues escape the country. But some, like Mr. Zadran, remain. His claims for refugee status in the U.S. are moving, slowly. So Mr. Zadran waits – and hopes.

“It’s reassuring that people think of you,” he says, “that they care about what happens to you.” 

When Malik Jan Zadran decided to work with The Christian Science Monitor, it felt like a promise. He would protect his American colleagues. Yes, the Taliban had just fallen, but they lingered in the shadows and along the margins – in the places reporters most needed to go.

So Mr. Zadran went to work to keep his new friends safe.

“If we planned to go to a province where the security was not good, my job was to do due diligence – talk to villagers, do my research,” he says. “I would brief the reporters and take precautions. And I enjoyed every minute of it.”

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Afghan colleagues who helped the Monitor report in Afghanistan for 20 years put their trust in us and in the United States. Now, some still can’t get out. They’re hoping something can change.

But 20 years later, the situation has reversed. Now it is the Taliban who have taken over, and it is Mr. Zadran’s American colleagues who need to protect and help him. Today, he remains in Afghanistan, the Monitor unable to bring him or several other Afghans who worked with us to safety.

Now, 2 1/2 years after the fall of Afghanistan, the Monitor has had some success in helping to extract the colleagues who risked their lives to help us. But four remain. They were drivers, but also tour guides and purveyors of jokes to break the tension. They knew the best roadside stands for pomegranates on the interminably bumpy treks through dusty landscapes browned by a relentless sun. They shared succulent kebabs with Monitor reporters, including myself, as the hushed purples of the Hindu Kush evenings set in.

Mr. Zadran says he has already paid the price of a son – killed because Mr. Zadran took what the Taliban saw as the traitorous step of working for an American, Christian newspaper. Now in hiding, Mr. Zadran still gets calls: “You are a puppet of the Americans; you are a sick person. We witnessed that you served the Americans. Thank God we are letting you survive. You should be dead.”

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