Activists call Canada to help Afgan women face deportation of Afghan women due to the cutting of the Trump Administration
Hela Sedek in Vancouver in a sunny Tuesday morning, stops outside the school where he was attended by Canada since September.
19-year-old Sedeqi, at home, was studying in Afghanistan’s house. Now graduated from 11th grade, elite private school, Crofton House school.
However, with the latest financing cutting under the leadership of US President Donald Trump, he will not win the chances of other Afghan women like him.
Saying that the Taliban has the opportunity to learn from Afghanistan, Afghanistan, Afghanistan changed his life and fears for other women who received a scholarship funded in the United States.
“This is heartwarming. I imagine myself in this position,” Sedeqi told CBC.
More than 120 Afghan women are being determined to lose their scholarships by the United States International Development Agency (USAID), which allows you to participate in universities in cities like Qatar and Oman.

Trump management has canceled the scholarship program as part of the USAID sweep cutting by accusing the agency Extensive waste and criticizing Adaptation programs with American foreign policy purposes.
February, in February’s email, USAD informed students to students to be suspended for Afghan women’s scholarships and informed the students to be obtained “Travel to Afghanistan.”
Activists now call the Canadian government and universities to help women research here, if they return to the Taliban government, students can face terrible and potential life.
Taliban Education Ban
The Taliban has banned women from most of the people of public life, because after the 6th grade of the 6th grade, because in the first temperate rules, after the return of the US forces, the rules of government after the rule.
According to 2023 Information The United Nations, at least 1.4 million Afghan girls have been prohibited from secondary education since 2021, and more than 100,000 were rejected after secondary education.
Susan Ormiston, CBC, changes in Afghanistan and the changes they saw in Afghanistan and the country’s women and daughters and three years after the country’s withdraw from the country, three years later.
The Taliban applies a decisive clothing code in arrest women who are not related to the hijab or Islamic hijabs. The United Nations and other human rights organizations expressed their cruel punishment for some women, including petrification and slip.
Friba Rezaye is a non-profit organization that is not in a vancouver that helps children to study with dozens of Afghan students, including the executive director of female leaders, Sedeqi, including the BC
He says that USAID is full of messages that want a lot of help from their receivers.
“This is a really scary situation because there is nothing for them,” he said.

Panic attacks
USAID scholarships should be funded by 2028, but the US State Department spokesman told CBC News this week that the government will finance scholarships until June 30 this year.
The spokesman did not answer questions about the government to finance the government outside this date.
The female scholarship told CBC News that the scholarship program will end on June 30 and intends to work with USAID and the state department intends to demand an extension to allow all students to graduate.
Tuesday, Federal Judge controller The demolition of USAID has probably violated the Constitution, but it is not yet clear what it means for USAID operations.
CBC news spoke in one of the students studying in Qatar, a year before the program.
“Many girls attacked panic, so we must take them to the hospital … stress and anxiety.”
CBC News does not call the student concern for their security when they return to Afghanistan.
“We beat every door that we can find a scholarship or something that we can go and continue our education and return to Afghanistan,” he said.
A profit that could not make a profit of Afghan women to get a safe education, US President Donald Trump was terminated to terminate 240 young women in the United States International Development Agency (USAID). Last year, the line, who received one of these scholarships, shares what it means and what could be what it means to return to him and his homeland.
Rezayee said he hoped to support Canadian Universities and the Federal Government.
Murwarid Ziayee, Director General of Non-Commercial Rights, Canada’s not entitled to Afghanistan, agreed.
“They need such a support more than ever.” “There are opportunities to step and adapt to answer the current crisis.”
‘Where there is a will, there is a way’
Christina Clark-Kazak, Ottawa University specializing in IDENTAL migration, Afghan students will face many problems trying to come to Canada, he said.
“The issue cannot give a scholarship if the person cannot enter Canada.”
The best bet said the students would be the best bet to apply for a student visa, but returned to their countries and laid the federal government to new international education permits.

Clark-Cossack will need a stipend of universities, but will need Ottawa to help them to bring students to Canada.
According to him, universities have previously increased in times of crisis, including in 2015, in 2015, as several assistant sponsors can continue their education.
“There is a way where there is a will,” he said.
In a statement to CBC News, global affairs, Canada, in Afghanistan, with interesting parties in Afghanistan, associate with their education to understand the impact of ASAID education programs, “he said.
“Canada is concerned about the long-term effects of reduced funding for sensitive people in the world. He admit that each country has the right to determine its development, foreign policy priorities and organizational structures,” he said.
Sedeqi, USAID hopes to try and bring and bring and bring and bring receivers receivers to Canada or other countries.
“He’s the only thing we can help them and even save their lives,” he said.
“We will not allow them to return to Afghanistan.”