The Free Press Journal

TOUGH TASK AHEAD FOR TALIBAN IN AFGHANISTA­N

UK ends 20-yr military campaign in Af 2 journalist­s, 2 athletes among victims of Kabul twin blasts

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KABUL: Two journalist­s, including a female TV anchor and two athletes, were killed in a deadly explosion at Hamid Karzai Internatio­nal Airport in Kabul.

Citing an independen­t Afghan media group Afghanista­n Journalist­s Center (AFJC), Xinhua reported on Sunday that Ali Reza Ahmadi, a reporter for Raha News Agency and Najma Sadeqi, former presenter at Jahan-e-Sihat TV channel were killed in Thursday's airport attack.

Two Afghan national-level athletes - Mohammad Jan Sultani in taekwondo and Idrees in wushu - among those killed in Kabul airport attack, reported 1TVNewsAF.

At least 170 Afghans and 13 US soldiers were killed and about 200 people wounded in the suicide blast that hit an eastern airport gate when huge crowds were waiting for evacuation flights, reported Xinhua.

The victims have mostly been women and children and Islamic State- Khorasan (ISISK), a local affiliate of the Islamic State, has claimed responsibi­lity for the attack.

Over 100 journalist­s have been killed in Afghanista­n in the past two decades, making the Asian country one of the most dangerous countries for journalist­s.

Meanwhile, thousands of Afghan nationals are camped outside the perimeter of the airport in desperate attempts to escape on the last flights out as the Taliban deadline of August 31 approaches.

The last remaining UK troops began landing back from Kabul in Britain on Sunday, ending the country's 20-year military campaign in Afghanista­n where the Taliban have seized power.

The Taliban insurgents stormed across the country on August 15, capturing all major cities in a matter of days, two weeks before the US was set to complete its troop withdrawal after a costly two-decade war.

A Royal Air Force (RAF) plane left Kabul airport on Saturday night and arrived at RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshir­e, including with British ambassador to Afghanista­n Sir Laurie Bristow who had been assisting the evacuation process. Vice-Admiral Sir Ben Key, who ran the UK's evacuation dubbed Operation Pitting, said there was a "sense of sadness that we haven't done all we would have wished".

In a video posted on Twitter on Sunday morning, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the end of Operation Pitting was the "culminatio­n of a mission unlike anything we've seen in our lifetimes", and that British troops and officials had "worked around the clock to a remorseles­s deadline in harrowing conditions".

"They have expended all the patience and care and thought they possess to help people in fear for their lives," said Johnson. "They've seen at first hand barbaric terrorist attacks on the queues of people they were trying to comfort, as well as on our American friends. They didn't flinch. They kept calm. They got on with the job," he said. In a letter to the armed forces community, Johnson acknowledg­ed the fall of Kabul to the Taliban would have been hard for them to watch and "an especially difficult time for the friends and loved ones of the 457 service personnel who laid down their lives" during the war. He noted that the UK's involvemen­t in Afghanista­n "kept Al Qaeda from our door for two decades and we are all safer as a result".

He added: "Though we would not have wished to leave in this way, we have to recognise that we came in with the United States, in defence and support of the US and the US military did the overwhelmi­ng bulk of the fighting."

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