From the BBC:
“Soldiers reunited with 'left
behind' Afghan interpreter”
(Vance Bacon-Sharratt, Paul
Standen, Sam Knight and Josh Roberts met Abdul and his children on Sunday)
A group of former soldiers have
been reunited with their Afghan interpreter after winning a legal battle to
allow him to settle in the UK. The interpreter - who the BBC is calling Abdul -
went into hiding after being turned away from evacuation flights following the
Taliban takeover. The Mercian Regiment veterans felt he was "left
behind" and successfully forced a government U-turn. Seeing him again
"brought back the brotherhood", one said. Josh Roberts, Paul Standen,
Sam Knight and Vance Bacon-Sharratt - from Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire -
said they spent months under fire together with Abdul in Helmand Province.
After international forces
withdrew last year, the Taliban quickly regained control of the country. Many
Afghans who worked for British forces were resettled in the UK via the Afghan
Relocations and Assistance Policy (ARAP) scheme. However, Abdul failed to get
national security clearance after being rejected for a job with the US armed
forces. At the time, the soldiers said it felt like they had "left a man
behind". They engaged a lawyer specialising in national security and
prepared a case for judicial . Before it reached court, the Home Office agreed
to review Abdul's situation, and ultimately decided he was not a security risk.
At the reunion on Sunday, Mr Bacon-Sharratt said: "It's just been
amazing... the fact that we've managed to help a family that was thousands of
miles away, and we've been able to work together to get this done. It's
unreal." "The minute I saw him it brought back the brotherhood of
what we had when we there," he added.
'He's a brother'
(Josh Roberts, Paul Standen, Sam
Knight and Vance Bacon-Sharratt)
"We'd have done it for each
other. We've all been through hard times and we all help each other - he's a
brother, he's one of us." Mr Knight said he was "speechless really...
lost for words. Just happy that it's all come together because there were a lot
of doubts and moments when we though it wasn't going well, but we're here now
with our friend. "His family is safe - that's exactly what we
wanted." "I've got tears in my eyes now talking about it, if I'm
honest. It's emotional, really emotional." A Home Office spokesperson
said: "During Operation Pitting we evacuated 15,000 people from Kabul and we
continue to do all we can to secure safe passage and enable British nationals
and eligible Afghans to leave the country. While we cannot comment on
individual ARAP applications, we have relocated 2,900 eligible Afghans since
the fall of Kabul, which means over 9,400 individuals and their dependents have
been relocated to the UK since the scheme began. "We continue to progress
applications as quickly as possible."
^ Sadly it took so long to do
this and who knows how many are still left behind (by the British, the Americans,
etc.) and have to hide from the Taliban. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-nottinghamshire-61661098
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