Leicester Mercury

Afghan evacuation is ‘worst scenario’

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UK troops in Afghanista­n have said they are facing challenges “nobody has experience­d before”, as a former defence chief warned the Kabul airport evacuation is the “worst possible scenario”.

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) confirmed yesterday that seven Afghan civilians had died in the chaotic crowds outside the airport, while reports have suggested as many as 20 people have been killed in the past week while trying to get into the airfield.

The Operation Pitting rescue mission is being supported by 1,000 British troops – including Paras from 16 Air Assault Brigade – with a further 1,700 people repatriate­d in the past 24 hours.

Ministers are desperate for US President Joe Biden to keep American forces on the ground beyond his August 31 deadline, with Labour calling for the Prime Minister to phone the UK ally to extend the exit date.

Boris Johnson confirmed on social media that he will convene G7 leaders, which will include Mr Biden, tomorrow for “urgent talks” on the situation in Afghanista­n.

In a statement, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the group would discuss “continuing our close co-ordination on Afghanista­n policy” as well as ongoing evacuation efforts.

Involved in that exercise is Lieutenant Colonel Justin Baker from 16 Air Assault Brigade, who is stationed at the passenger handling facility at Hamid Karzai airport.

He said: “I think this is something that nobody has really experience­d before, so we are facing challenges that nobody has experience for.”

Former chief of the defence staff Lord Richards said UK forces securing the air strip are in a “very precarious situation”, with little protection from security threats posed by the likes of so-called Islamic State.

“I’ve done a few of these noncombat evacuation operations in my time and this is the worst possible scenario, when you are unable to clear a space between the airhead and your possible threat, which is exactly what is happening now,” he told Times Radio.

“They are right on top of people and we’ve seen the tragic scenes coming out of Kabul airport, so it is not a good situation.”

Armed forces minister James Heappey said British troops are “seeing things that are unimaginab­ly hard to deal with”, with reports of overcrowdi­ng and violence in the Kabul heat.

However, he said there have been “very encouragin­g” improvemen­ts at the Baron Hotel in Kabul, where Britons and Afghans eligible for repatriati­on are being processed, following reports earlier this weekend that it had been blockaded by the Taliban.

He said the “flow” outside the hotel is “significan­tly” better following changes to crowd control by the militant regime, with 731 people processed for UK flights on Sunday morning alone.

 ??  ?? Troops evacuate eligible civilians and their families out of Afghanista­n
Troops evacuate eligible civilians and their families out of Afghanista­n
 ??  ?? A Taliban fighter stands guard at a checkpoint in Kabul
A Taliban fighter stands guard at a checkpoint in Kabul

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