Skip to content
Homepage Our Story

Our Story

November 2023

Formal founding meeting of Local Staff International and election of the Board. Prof. Sara de Jong and Marcus Grotian are elected as co-chairs of the board, alongside board members with expertise in management, finance, defence issues and veteran affairs, communication, and refugee support. 

Our Story, representatives from advocacy initiatives from Australia, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, United Kingdom, and the United States meet in Germany to prepare the foundation of an international entity to help local staff.

May 2023

Berlin

Representatives from advocacy initiatives from Australia, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, United Kingdom, and the United States meet in Berlin, Germany to prepare the foundation of an international entity to engage with states and international organisations to advise them on policymaking concerning the protection, rights and support for Local Staff in the present and future. 

The meeting was organised by Marcus Grotian and Prof. Sara de Jong and funded and supported by the British Academy and the German Patenschaftsnetzwerk Afghanische Ortskräfte. 

AUGUST 2021

Fall of Kabul

Afghanistan is taken over by the Taliban when international troops withdraw, leading to last-minute evacuation efforts of Local Staff. Marcus Grotian and Dr. Sara de Jong are invited speakers at the online event ‘Europe Calling: “Locally Employed Civilians in Afghanistan – How can we save those in need of protection now?”’, led by Sven Giegold (MEP, spokesperson for the German Greens in the European Parliament).  

Marcus Grotian and Dr Sara de Jong are invited to speak at the at the online event ‘Europe Calling: “Locally Employed Civilians in Afghanistan in 2021.

June 2021

Advocacy organisations publish a collective letter

The letter calls upon the Heads of State and Governments in the US, Canada, Australia, Britain, Germany, France and Italy, as well as NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg “to act immediately to evacuate Locally Engaged Civilians (LECs) and their families”, warning them that “time is running out to protect NATO’s local Afghan allies”. 

The letter received international media coverage, including in The Times (UK); Der Tagesspiegel (Germany); Politiken (Denmark), Trouw (the Netherlands); The Guardian (Australia desk), and Business Insider.

Our Story, Der Tagesspiege article on the advocacy organisations publication of a collective letter to evacuate Locally Engaged Civilians (LECs) and their families in 2021.

Our Story, Trouw article on the advocacy organisations publication of a collective letter to evacuate Locally Engaged Civilians (LECs) and their families in 2021.

June 2019

An International Advocates Knowledge Exchange Meeting was held in London, bringing together representatives of seven national advocacy and support initiatives and former Afghan local staff, to discuss joint efforts to address the protection and rights of Afghan (former) Locally Engaged Civilians, identifying common challenges and developing shared strategies.

The meeting was organised by Dr. Sara de Jong (University of York) with funding from the HEIF (Higher Education Innovation Fund).

April 2018

United Nations

The United Nations #ProtectLinguists Roundtable in New York in cooperation with Red T and partners from the international language community addresses the need for greater protection for translators and interpreters in armed conflict and post-conflict peacebuilding. The roundtable, attended by Marcus Grotian and Dr. Sara de Jong, enabled broader networking with stakeholders from the linguistic community and representatives and refugee NGOs and strengthens the resolve to develop a united and international approach to the protection of local staff. 

The United Nations #ProtectLinguists Roundtable in New York in 2018

January 2018

The international language community, led by Linda Fitchett, chair of the AIIC Conflict Zone Interpreter Group, organised a cross-party hearing in the European Parliament (Brussels, Belgium) on how to protect former interpreters in conflict zones. The meeting, attended by Marcus Grotian and Dr. Sara de Jong, reinforces their view that there is a significant lack of regulative, administrative and organisational support for local staff.

November 2017

Marcus Grotian, representing the German Patenschaftsnetzwerk Afghanische Ortskräfte e.V.’ (the Network of Sponsors of Locally Employed Afghans) and Dr. Sara de Jong, academic expert in the protection and right claims of Locally Employed Civilians, held a planning meeting in Potsdam, Germany, with international stakeholders, to build capacity for a future international NGO to support former locally employed civilians of organisations and member states of UN, NATO and EU.