Qismat badalne main der nahi lagti - Ex-Afghan minister has now became ‘pizza delivery boy’ in Germany

Qismat badalne main der nahi lagti - Ex-Afghan minister has now became ‘pizza delivery boy’ in Germany

A former Afghan minister was spotted "delivering pizza" in Germany a year after he left his position in Afghanistan. Oxford graduate Ahmad Saadat was spotted on streets of Leipzig in orange-coloured clothes with a bag hung on his back. Syed Ahmad Shah Saadat, a former Afghanistan information minister, could be seen dressed in orange-coloured clothes with a bag hung on his back in Leipzig, India Today reported. The pictures, captured by a German journalist, of Saadat went viral on social media.
The journalist claimed that he had spotted Saadat on the streets of Leipzig as he was delivering pizzas on a bicycle.

"A few days ago, I met a man who claimed to have been the Afghan communications minister for two years ago. I asked what he was doing in Leipzig. "I'm driving out of Essen for Lieferando" [the man told the jounalist]"," the journalist wrote on the microblogging site, Twitter.

The report stated that Lieferando provides food delivery services in Germany.

Reportedly, Saadat, while speaking to Sky News Arabia, confirmed that the pictures circulating were indeed his.


Syed Ahmad Shah Saadat had joined the Ashraf Ghani-led Afghan government as a cabinet minister in 2018. He had served for two years as the Afghanistan information and technology minister and later resigned in 2020. He then reportedly arrived in Germany in December last year.

Interestingly, Saadat also holds two master's degrees in communications and electronic engineering from Oxford University, the Hindustan Times reported.

The photos of the former Afghan minister were circulating at a time when his country's control has been taken by the Taliban with foreign forces engaged in the evacuation process of people from different countries.

The Taliban's stunning and rapid takeover of Afghanistan was the result not only of their battlefield strength but also a sustained push to force surrenders and cut deals.

The group mixed threats and lure with propaganda and psychological warfare as they took city after city — some with barely a shot fired — eventually capturing the capital Kabul on August 15.

When asked about the developments in Afghanistan, Saadat told the media, "The fall of the Ashraf Ghani government so quickly, was not expected."

As foreign troops began their final withdrawal in May, Washington and Kabul were confident the Afghan military would put up a strong fight against the Taliban.

With more than 300,000 personnel and multibillion-dollar equipment more advanced than the Taliban arsenal, Afghan forces were formidable — on paper.

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