LEIPZIG: He was once a minister in Afghanistan but quit, fed up with the corruption. Now in Germany, Sayed Sadaat is making a living delivering meals as a bicycle courier.
For six hours on weekdays and from noon to 10:00 pm on Saturdays and Sundays, Sadaat dons his distinctive orange coat and big square backpack, shuttling pizzas or other orders to customers.
“There is no shame in the job at all. Work is work,” he told AFP. “If there is a job, it means there is public demand […] someone has to do it,” he said.
Sadaat is one of the thousands of Afghans who have found a home in Germany over the last years.
Since 2015, when Europe saw a huge influx of people fleeing wars mostly from Syria and Iraq, around 210,000 Afghans have sought asylum in Germany.
This makes them the second biggest group of people seeking protection in Europe’s most populous country after Syrians.
With the Taliban’s return to power earlier this month, Germany has also evacuated around 4,000 Afghans, including those who worked with NATO forces and others who need protection.
‘FOR PRIVATE BENEFIT’:
Sadaat’s journey to Germany was far less harrowing.
He was minister of communications in Afghanistan from 2016 to 2018. But the 50-year-old said he quit his post because he was fed up with corruption in the government.
“When doing the job as a minister there was a difference between the president’s close circle and myself,” he explained.
“Their demands were for private benefit, I wanted the money for government projects to be implemented properly.
“So I could not fulfil their demands and then they tried to push me, put pressure on me from the president’s side.”
He took on a consultancy job in the telecommunications sector in Afghanistan.
But by 2020, the security situation had deteriorated, he said. “So I decided to leave,” he told AFP.
As a dual Afghan-British citizen, he decided to move to Germany at the end of 2020 before Brexit made it no longer possible for Britons to obtain residency in the EU without conditions such as an offer of employment.
He could have secured a post in Britain but said he saw more opportunities for his sector in Germany.
But without German, Sadaat, who came alone and refuses to talk about his family, said he has struggled to get employed.
ADVISING THE GOVERNMENT?
The coronavirus pandemic delayed his plans to learn to speak German. But he is now taking language classes four hours a day, before getting on the bicycle for food delivery company Lieferando.
The job pays up to 15 euros ($18) an hour, enough for his living expenses, including rent of 420 euros a month.
Sadaat said he does not regret his decision to move to Germany. “I know this challenge is for a short time, it is until I can get another job,” he said, touting the physical benefits of cycling 1,200 kilometres (745 miles) every month.
With the return to power of the Taliban and the withdrawal of NATO forces from his native country, he sees another possible opening for him in Germany.
“I can advise the German government on Afghanistan so that the Afghan people can benefit because I reflect the true picture there,” he said.
He admits, however, that no contact has yet been made with the German authorities on the issue.
As for the Taliban, he believes they may have “learnt from the past mistakes” in terms of human, women’s rights. But he calls on the international community not to turn its back on Afghanistan and continue providing economic support.
As his shift begins at the stroke of midday, he flicks through his phone. “I have to go now,” he says, riding off through the rain for his first delivery of the day.