Afghan displacement is a global reality, and the institutions meeting it are international. The firm serves them from a secure base — wherever the population has gone, and without a dependency inside Afghanistan.
International Procurement sets out how multilateral bodies, donor and development agencies, international NGOs, and European public institutions can engage the firm. The Afghan diaspora is among the world's largest, and the institutions serving it span continents — refugee and migration agencies, asylum and court systems, health and resettlement services across Europe and beyond. The firm serves them with qualified, validated Afghan-language and cultural capability, delivered from a secure base and structured for cross-border work. Offices in London and Berlin are planned; European clients are served today, under GDPR and UK GDPR.
Afghan displacement did not stay within one region. It produced one of the world's largest diasporas — concentrated in Europe, dispersed across resettlement countries, and served by institutions on several continents. Those institutions face the same problem American ones do, often more acutely: they must understand a population across two dozen languages and a culture that does not resolve into one. The firm serves that need internationally, with the same qualified, validated capability it brings to its domestic work — and from a base deliberately outside Afghanistan.
The firm's work follows the population, not a border. Increasingly, that means the diaspora — in Europe and beyond — and the institutions serving it there.
The firm is headquartered in the United States and serves international clients today. Offices in London and Berlin are planned — for proximity to the largest European Afghan communities and the institutions serving them — and are stated as what they are: planned, not yet open. European clients are served now, under GDPR and UK GDPR, with the firm's data practices built to that standard. And the firm maintains no presence inside Afghanistan, by deliberate design — which, for an international buyer, means the firm serves the global diaspora from a secure base, without the operational or security exposure an in-country footprint would carry.
The firm holds the registrations its work requires, and states only what it holds.
For the firm's competencies, codes, and registrations in one place, the Capability Statement is the document to start with. For European engagements, the firm's data-protection posture — GDPR and UK GDPR — and the assurance documents in the Trust Center speak to the questions an international buyer asks first. A senior point of contact will respond.
Neither does an institution serving a displaced population across languages it cannot yet reach. Wherever the work is, the firm can be engaged.
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