//Sorry, but why didn’t you just remain and sort it out yourself instead of relying on others to do it for you?//
For the same reason as I wouldn’t remain in my house if it caught fire. Sorry but your argument is specious.
//The taliban fired into a group of demonstrators just today and killed loads of them.//
You have no idea of the circumstances surrounding that event. Neither have I. The Taliban are now in charge. Demonstrations are not well received. Action was probably taken to prevent recurrences. Once again you make the mistake of believing that Afghanistan should be like the UK. It’s not. It never will be. You don’t get taken to court and get a Conditional Discharge for demonstrating against the government in Afghanistan.
//They have no army to protect them… It sounds to me like you’d rather they be dead in afghanistan than anywhere near here if given the choice.//
I don’t wish anybody dead, anywhere. But it’s not a binary choice. They can remain alive in Afghanistan if they behave and they’re lucky, or if they must decamp they can go somewhere more suited to their culture and lifestyle. But you are quite right – I don’t want them anywhere near here.
The Afghan people must get used to a new regime – one which would have prevailed for the last two decades had the West not interfered in its affairs. England had a similar regime in the Middle Ages. People were punished and many executed for (what are now) the most trivial misdemeanours. Even some sovereigns and their consorts lost their heads. But the majority of the population knew the rules, did not defy or disobey and so they survived. Eventually the country became more enlightened. Witches are no longer burned at the stake; small boys are no longer sent up chimneys; queens are no longer beheaded for alleged infidelity. That’s what should happen in Afghanistan. I doubt that it ever will but if it doesn’t that’s their business, not ours.