The group, which gathered near the French embassy but was promptly dispersed by police, displayed banners calling for protection and France's solidarity with endangered interpreters.
"Why are we still here in Kabul? Why were our demands rejected by the French government?" said Khodadad Adib, 28, their representative.
"We were with the soldiers in sometimes dangerous places. Today we find ourselves in a fragile situation but the army is no longer there with us."
They said they have seen their visa applications rejected once and sometimes several times without explanation.
"I would like to know why," said Habibullah Habib, 24, who was an interpreter for the French in the dangerous Kapisa valley northeast of Kabul.
"Daesh (the Arabic acronym for the Islamic State group) and the Taliban are looking for us. If they find us they will kill us for working with foreign armies," he said.
Habib, who lives with relatives in Parwan province north of Kabul, said he had received several anonymous letters threatening him and his family with death.
In 2013 and again in 2015, his visa application was refused.
"I get calls calling me a spy for working with foreign troops," said Noorzai Mohammed Amin, 50.
A total of 70,000 French soldiers were deployed in Afghanistan between the end of 2001 and the end of 2014, of whom 89 were killed and about 700 wounded.
Some 700 Afghans worked with them in jobs such as mechanics, housekeepers and interpreters.
Others have tried illegal emigration routes, sometimes at the risk of their lives.
A similar demonstration by Afghan interpreters was scheduled simultaneously today in Paris.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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