Leicester Mercury

County student evacuated out of Kabul

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A BRITISH student who travelled to Afghanista­n on holiday has been evacuated to Dubai after being forced into hiding by the advance of the Taliban.

Loughborou­gh University’s Miles Routledge, pictured, received widespread attention and criticism on social media having travelled to the country on a planned trip last week, despite the extremist group making gains in the nation at the same time.

Miles, 21, had shared updates about his experience­s over recent days as the Taliban seized the country, including claims he had encountere­d the Taliban, seen dead bodies in the street and shielded from gunfire.

On Tuesday he said that he had got a place on a list for evacuation from Kabul, and hours later posted a video of himself and dozens of others landing in what he described as a British Army plane.

“The happy ending: landed in Dubai thanks to the brilliant people at the British Army. All safe!” he wrote. The previous day, Miles told the PA news agency he and other civilians, including some other British citizens, had been given refuge in what he described as a Nato-controlled building in Kabul. A spokesman for Nato was unable to confirm his claim.

DOWNING Street has insisted that the Taliban will be judged on its actions not its words after the head of the British armed forces suggested the militants may have “changed” in the last 20 years.

Chief of the Defence Staff General Sir Nick Carter said on Wednesday that the world needs to be patient and “hold its nerve” to see what the future will look like in Afghanista­n under a Taliban-led government.

He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I think we also have to be patient. We have heard a lot from the Taliban over the last 24 hours and it maybe that this Taliban is a different Taliban to the one that people remember from the 1990s.

“It may well be a Taliban that is more reasonable, less repressive and if you look at the way it is governing Kabul at the moment, there are some indication­s that it is more reasonable.”

Downing Street would not be drawn on whether the UK would recognise any government formed by the Taliban in Afghanista­n.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said any decision would need a “unified approach” internatio­nally.

“We’ll have to see what unfolds,” he said. But Gen Sir Nick told the Today programme: “It may well be that they have learned from the last 20 years in the same way that we have learned from the last 20 years.

“It may be that they believe the civil society that has been created in Afghanista­n over the last 20 years should be given a chance to carry on but under their terms to one degree or another, but I think we need to be patient and we need to hold our nerve and let’s see what happens.”

While he told Sky News: “I do think that they have changed. I think they recognise that over the course of the last 20 years that Afghanista­n has evolved. They recognise the fundamenta­l role women have played in that evolution. And yes, they at the moment will undoubtedl­y say they want to respect women’s rights under Islamic law and that will be a Sharia law, but that doesn’t necessaril­y mean they won’t allow them to be involved in government, education and medicine and in those things they need them to be involved in.

“So I think we have to be patient. We have to give them the space to show how they are going to step up to the plate. Whether or not we can work with them will depend very much on how they treat all Afghans.”

Asked about the comments, the Prime Minister’s official spokesman said Gen Sir Nick was “simply reflecting on what had been claimed by the Taliban yesterday”.

He said: “The Taliban will be judged on their actions, not their words.”

But Labour’s shadow foreign secretary Lisa Nandy, appearing on Sky News directly after Gen Sir Nick, said it was a “very difficult and unpalatabl­e message” especially to women and girls in the country.

“She said: “I think we ought to be talking to the Taliban, but we ought to be talking to the Taliban about getting guarantees around human rights and about the future for women and girls.”

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 ??  ?? General Sir Nick Carter
General Sir Nick Carter

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