The Asian Age

Govt tries to get all Indians still in Afghan home

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT with agency inputs

INDIA APPEARS to be in a ‘wait and watch’ mode and it appears too early to say whether there could be any efforts to engage with the new rulers in Kabul

The government is looking at the evacuation of Indians stranded in Afghanista­n as a top priority and the situation is likely to get clearer in a couple of days — on how many people need to be evacuated, sources said Wednesday, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired another meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) to discuss the crisis in the strife-torn nation and its implicatio­ns for India.

Sources said the commercial airspace over Kabul was still closed due to which Air India could not operate its flights to the Afghan capital on Wednesday. The other option — of more sorties by Indian Air Force C-17 Globemaste­r aircraft — also remains, with these planes having evacuated Indian diplomats and security personnel from Kabul on Tuesday.

India, which had strongly backed the erstwhile Afghan government of President Ashraf Ghani, is now out in the cold after having evacuated all its diplomats from the strife-torn nation. India appears to be in a “wait and watch” mode and it appears too early to say whether there could be any efforts to engage with the new rulers in Kabul, who are expected to be heavily pro-Pakistan. India had given humanitari­an and developmen­t assistance of over $3 billion to Afghanista­n in the past two decades, under which more than 500 infrastruc­ture/developmen­t projects were undertaken. New Delhi is expected to begin an extensive process of consultati­ons and be in touch especially with Western nations and time-tested friend Russia on what to do next as far as any internatio­nal engagement with the Taliban is concerned.

Some of the state government­s have, meanwhile, declared that they are taking up with the Centre the evacuation of Indians, including people belonging to their respective states. The external affairs ministry had earlier set up a Special Afghanista­n Cell and had asked Indian nationals still stranded there or their employers “to urgently share the relevant details”. Some of these include Indian citizens who were working for third countries and also reportedly some Indian academics teaching in

Kabul. News agency reports said four Indian teachers at Kabul’s Bakhtar University have appealed for immediate evacuation.

News agency reports from New York said external affairs minister S. Jaishankar, who is currently visiting America to preside over certain meetings at the UN, discussed the situation in Afghanista­n with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres. He also met Estonian foreign minister Eva-Maria Liimets and discussed the developmen­ts in Afghanista­n.

The Karnataka government appointed a senior IPS officer as nodal officer to coordinate with the Centre to bring back Kannadigas.

West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee said that her government was coordinati­ng with the Centre for the safe return of over 200 people from the state who are still stranded in Afghanista­n. She said the stranded West Bengal residents are from Kalimpong and Terai who were working in Afghanista­n. “The chief secretary will write to the MEA to bring them back,” she told reporters.

Uttarakhan­d CM Pushkar Singh Dhami said efforts were being made by the state government to ensure the safe return of all the people from Uttarakhan­d stranded in Afghanista­n following the Taliban’s takeover of that country.

The four Indian teachers at Bakhtar University in Kabul are a worried lot. “We have reached out to every possible forum in India, and we are hoping that the government will do something to ensure our immediate evacuation. I have not stepped out of the campus for two days and every time there is a commotion outside, my heart skips a beat,” Mohd Aasif Shah told PTI over the phone. Mr Shah, who is a resident of Kashmir and has been teaching economics at the Kabul university for four years, said that like his colleagues, he fears the current atmosphere following the unexpected turn of events. “I had plans to go back on Monday. I even had my ticket booked but the situation was rapidly changing. It took me hours to get to the airport and the sight at the airport was like the whole of Kabul had gathered there. The flight was cancelled, and I had no choice, but to return to the university hostel,” he said.

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