“It is the worst decision anyone can make,” Ghafari said, noting that the Taliban swiftly took over Afghanistan as the U.S. withdrew its troops.

Ghafari and her family fled to Germany out of concern for their safety. She has voiced concerns that many Afghans who worked for the country’s government and foreign militaries still left in the country will be targeted by the Taliban.

“They’re just searching for people and they are going to their houses,” she said. “They have a long list of blacklisted people and they are killing everyone.”

For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below.

Ghafari was a shining example of the new Afghanistan that many of the nation’s people hoped would emerge after years of Taliban rule: a young female mayor appointed in a country where women’s rights were suppressed under the hardline Islamist group.

Now the 29-year-old is sitting in a German hotel after having fled her homeland along with thousands of other Afghans who fear the Taliban’s renewed takeover puts their lives at risk.

In an interview Wednesday with The Associated Press, Ghafari spoke about the pain she felt as she and her family prepared to fly out of Kabul following a harrowing effort to reach the airport.

“I am not sure my tears will be able to explain it,” she said. “The fear, the feeling, the pain that I have and I had at the moment.”

Ghafari became the mayor of the central Afghanistan city of Maidan Shahr in 2018, at the age of 26, She said she loved the job because it posed new challenges every day. Later, she moved to a position within Afghanistan’s Defense Ministry helping veterans and their families.

Her father was killed last year, she says by the Taliban. Ghafari herself survived repeated assassination attempts. Last year, she received the U.S. State Department’s 2020 International Women of Courage award.

Ghafari dismissed the Taliban’s public reassurances that they won’t seek retribution but said she was willing to speak to its leaders, insisting they would never get Afghanistan to recover from two decades of war without bringing the country’s women on board.

“They need to have women,” she said. “If they are not, I’m sure they won’t be successful.”