Arab News

India pulls out staff from its consulate in Kandahar

New Delhi claims evacuation from southern city is a temporary measure

- Sayed Salahuddin Kabul

New Delhi has temporaril­y evacuated staff from its consulate in Afghanista­n’s southern city of Kandahar, where the Taliban have unleashed a series of attacks in recent weeks, official Afghan sources and India’s Foreign Ministry said on Sunday.

“We were informed about this and told that as a precaution­ary move, India had to pull out the staff temporaril­y,” one of the sources from Kandahar, requesting anonymity as he is not authorized to speak to the media, told Arab News.

Officials from the Interior Ministry in Kabul refused to comment on the evacuation, which comes a week after New Delhi, Turkey, Pakistan and Russia had to either recall staff or halt operations at their consulates in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif due to the Taliban’s rapid territoria­l gains in the area.

However, Gran Hewad, a spokesman for the Afghan Foreign Ministry, told Arab News that the protection of diplomatic missions was “of high importance” for the government and that an “increase in the Taliban’s unpreceden­ted attacks” had prompted some nations to take precaution­ary measures for security reasons.

New Delhi said on Sunday it was “closely monitoring the evolving security in Afghanista­n.”

“The safety and security of our personnel is paramount. Due to the intense fighting near Kandahar city, India-based personnel have been brought back for the time being,” Arindam Bagchi, chief spokesman at India’s Foreign Ministry, said in a statement.

He added that India’s consulate in Kandahar was being run by local staff temporaril­y.

While the source in Kandahar had no further details about the evacuation, Indian media reports said that around 50 diplomats and security personnel had been pulled out due to the “deteriorat­ing security situation” in the

southern region, which is considered to be the group’s birthplace and its main stronghold.

The Taliban have widened control amid the withdrawal of foreign forces from Afghanista­n, which began on May 1 and is expected to be completed next month.

In recent weeks, the group has overrun several areas bordering five countries — Iran, Tajikistan, Turkmenist­an, China and Pakistan — and captured key border crossings through which Afghanista­n conducts most of its trade with Iran and Turkmenist­an.

The group said on Friday they had taken control of “85 percent of territory in Afghanista­n,” a claim dismissed by Afghan government officials as foreign forces, including the US, withdraw from Afghanista­n after almost 20 years of fighting.

According to sources privy to the Kandahar evacuation and as cited by the Indian media, a special Indian Air Force aircraft was sent on Saturday to bring back the staff.

India has remained a key regional player in Afghanista­n since the Taliban were ousted from power in late 2001 and has invested nearly $3 billion in aid and reconstruc­tion activities in the war-torn country.

 ?? File/Reuters ?? An Afghan soldier stands guard at a checkpost at Mahipar on Jalalabad-Kabul highway amid growing concerns about Taliban’s gains in recent weeks.
File/Reuters An Afghan soldier stands guard at a checkpost at Mahipar on Jalalabad-Kabul highway amid growing concerns about Taliban’s gains in recent weeks.

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