From the BBC:
“Afghanistan: Final UK flight
for civilians leaves Kabul, says government”
The UK's final evacuation flight
purely for civilians has left Afghanistan's capital, Kabul, the Ministry of
Defence has said. Further flights which leave will have UK diplomatic and
military personnel on board, it added. The head of the armed forces, Gen Sir
Nick Carter, said it was "heartbreaking" they had not been able to
rescue everybody. He said hundreds of Afghans eligible to come to the UK
remained in Afghanistan. A mass airlift has been under way since the Taliban
took control of the capital, with a deadline of 31 August in place for foreign
troops to leave the country. The US has been running the airport in
Afghanistan's capital, where a suicide bomb attack on Thursday may have killed
as many as 170 people - including two British nationals and the child of a
British national. Among those killed in the attack was Mohammad Niazi - a taxi
driver from London - who had travelled to Afghanistan to help his family get
inside the airport. It has not been confirmed whether he was one of the UK
nationals referred to by the Foreign Office. His brother Abdul Hamid said Mr
Niazi been killed during the firing in the aftermath of the blast. He said his
wife and two of his children were still missing.
More than 1,000 UK troops were in
Kabul helping to process departures at the airport at the height of the
operation. Some have already left and the rest will depart over the weekend. The
British ambassador to Afghanistan, Sir Laurie Bristow, who remained at Kabul
airport, tweeted that nearly 15,000 people had been evacuated but it was
"time to close this phase of the operation now". He added: "But
we haven't forgotten the people who still need to leave. We'll continue to do
everything we can to help them."
Chief of the defence staff Sir
Nick told Radio 4's Today programme: "[The evacuation] has gone as well as
it could do in the circumstances... but we haven't been able to bring everybody
out and that has been heartbreaking, and there have been some very challenging
judgements that have had to be made on the ground." He said the number of
Afghans who were eligible to come to the UK but remained in Afghanistan was in
the "high hundreds". He suggested some would not have wanted to take
the risk of travelling to the airport - or been unable to - rather than it
being down to "processing" issues. But he added: "We are forever
receiving messages and texts from our Afghan friends that are very distressing.
So we're all living this in the most painful way." He said those of them
who hadn't been able to leave via evacuation flights but were able to get out
another way would "always be welcome in Britain". Those already
evacuated include British nationals, as well as almost 8,000 Afghans eligible
under the UK's relocation scheme for those who worked for the UK government and
other vulnerable individuals. As of Friday, the government said between 800 and
1,100 eligible Afghans and 100 to 150 Britons had not been evacuated. Chairman
of the foreign affairs select committee Tom Tugendhat, who served in the
military in Afghanistan, told BBC Breakfast he was "extremely sad" so
many of his friends had been left behind and he was continuing to work to get
people out of the country. However, he said people should "forget"
about trying to get to Kabul airport, due to the numerous dangerous checkpoints
that have been installed along the motorways. "We're looking at different
networks to get people into second countries, and then connecting them to high
commissions and ambassadors of the United Kingdom, to get them to the UK
safely," he said.
^ The British have stopped
evacuating British Citizens and the Afghanis who helped them. The British have
left behind around 150 British Citizens and 1,1000 Afghani Allies. I do not
know if Pen Farthing and his animals were able to leave or not. Right now only the United States is still
evacuating people, but not for much longer. ^
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