Support for Refugees The charity offers a wide range of services for refugees in the UK to promote cultural integration and increase agency for individuals in the community. Services range from ESOL classes, legal clinics, a community fridge, mental health and more general mentoring services, financial advice, digital literacy support and many others. The organisation also provides services specific to particular demographics in the refugee community. For example, female empowerment workshops for Afghan women and a Girls Digital Education project for the digital literacy of Afghan girls is provided by the association. It also offers a Balkh and Ghorband Girls Football club, with 80 attendees in 2022, and a supplementary Saturday School for children and young people, with 150 students enrolled in 2022. Today the charity runs ESOL classes, offers free legal clinics, runs a supplementary Saturday school for refugee children, offers a women's corner for female refugees and organises regular cultural and social events. In 2017 the charity expanded significantly when it opened a second office in Hounslow, London. The charity now runs services across three London boroughs. In 2021, after the fall of Kabul, the charity provided emergency supplies and housing clinics for incoming refugees. The charity now runs services across three London boroughs. In June 2018 it worked with
Lewisham Borough Council to assist recent refugee arrivals to access public services. Although the charity's work is aimed towards the Afghan and Central Asian diaspora, it has a non-exclusion policy and in early 2023, it launched its ‘Ukrainian Resettlement Project,’ expanding its impact by providing services for Ukrainian refugees. The association continues to support the Ukrainian community in the UK through long-term resettlement services.
Operation Pitting After the evacuation of eligible Afghanistan nationals from Afghanistan to the UK following the
2021 Taliban offensive, the ACAA advised the Minister of Housing on the accommodation of the large influx of refugees in London. With its main office located close to Heathrow Airport, it also became a central point of contact for the incoming refugees. For the first several days after the 2021 Taliban offensive, over 600 people were reported to have been queuing outside the ACAA’s office, in order to receive legal aid and basic necessities.
Political Awareness The association also does advocacy work for the rights of refugees in the UK. Through social media, information on their website and international peace conferences, the association promotes its values of cultural integration and the rights of refugees in the UK. The association has also advised government initiatives, such as the home office’s ‘prevent’ initiative, aiming to reduce radicalisation and support for terrorist organisations.
Cultural Events As well as academic conferences, the association often hosts events to preserve the cultural identities of refugees and migrants from Afghanistan and Central Asia. From women’s tea corners to music and dance events, the association aims to provide opportunities for community to be fostered among the Afghan and Central Asian migrant community. == Previous Work in Afghanistan ==