The Scottish Mail on Sunday

UK: RUN FOR THE BORDER

As women crushed to death in worst day yet at airport, Defence Secretary tells MoS time’s running out and launches desperate new plan to save those left behind THE MOST DRAMATIC PICTURES AND SHARPEST ANALYSIS

- By Glen Owen and Ian Gallagher

AFGHANS trying to flee to Britain to escape the Taliban will have to make their own way to the borders if the Americans do not delay the date for leaving the country, Defence Secretary Ben Wallace declares today.

Mail on Sunday, Mr Wallace warns that time is ‘ticking along, impossible to stop’ towards the imminent end of the UK’s mission to rescue thousands of Afghans entitled to come to the UK.

While acknowledg­ing that ‘no nation will be able to get everyone out’, Mr Wallace also announces that a series of ‘processing hubs’ will be set up in countries neighbouri­ng Afghanista­n for refugees who manage to escape. If they can establish their right to come to the UK, they will be flown to Britain.

The MoD is looking at establishi­ng hubs in countries such as Pakistan and Turkey – but, startlingl­y, is also exploring whether the Taliban might allow the UK to retain a ‘presence’ in Kabul after the Americans have gone.

Mr Wallace makes a veiled plea for Washington to delay the US leaving date beyond August 31, writing: ‘Perhaps the Americans will be permitted to stay longer and they will have our complete support if they do.’

The 900 British troops cannot remain without the logistical support of the 6,000 US soldiers in Kabul and will have to finish the evacuation before that point to allow enough time to secure their own safe exit.

Mr Wallace’s announceme­nt coincided with scenes of carnage at

‘No one wanted 20 years of sacrifice to end like this’ ‘Fears British jihadis will join the Taliban regime’

Kabul airport yesterday, with reports of at least four women crushed to death in a stampede.

US citizens were yesterday warned not to go to the airport amid fears that they might be hijacked en route by militants. The State Department said the US side of the airport would close for 48 hours. The British section remained open.

According to the MoD, 3,821 British and Afghan nationals have been evacuated from Kabul, where 1,000 British troops are based. About 3,500 people are still waiting to be airlifted.

Last night, an MoD source said the announceme­nt about the refugee centres was intended to display ‘honesty’ about the thousands of British allies likely to be left behind. In a separate announceme­nt last night, under-fire Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said Britain had ‘stepped up to the plate’ after he secured 200 visa waivers for Afghan journalist­s to flee.

In other dramatic developmen­ts:

Mr Raab was accused of defying an order from No10 to return early from his holiday as the crisis escalated. However, allies of Mr Raab said Boris Johnson had given him permission to remain;

Tony Blair branded the ‘abandonmen­t of Afghanista­n and its people’ as ‘tragic and dangerous’;

Sources claimed that the Prime Minister felt ‘betrayed’ by Joe Biden over the Afghan withdrawal – although No10 denied there are any tensions between the two;

One source even claimed the President, 78, was ‘a bit doolally’;

Taliban leaders Mullah Baradar and Siraj Haqqani arrived in Kabul to form a new government;

UK hate preacher Anjem Choudary urged the Taliban to restore full Islamic justice, including stoning adulterers;

The Home Office was scrambling to make the Taliban a proscribed group in an attempt to dissuade British jihadis from heading to Afghanista­n;

Britons in Kabul said the city was running out of food and money;

Britain’s heroic ambassador to

Afghanista­n, Sir Laurie Bristow, called the crisis the ‘greatest challenge’ of his 30-year career.

Thousands rallied in London in protest at the Government’s handling of the crisis;

The Minister with responsibi­lity for Afghanista­n, Lord Ahmad, was reported to be on holiday when the Taliban seized Kabul.

In his article today, Mr Wallace says that the collapse of Afghanista­n has been ‘an exhausting, worrying and demanding time’, and warns that ‘the distressin­g exit of the West will have consequenc­es for us all for years to come’.

He says: ‘The Parachute Regiment at the airport are dealing with unimaginab­le challenges. Public order, overcrowdi­ng, searing heat and desperate people. Soldiers trained for war are instead holding babies and co-ordinating crowds.’

The Minister adds: ‘Too many people in the airport has meant a suspension of access. I am confident that too will be fixed or mitigated but until it is, the crowds will get bigger. And ticking along, impossible to stop, is time. I have said all along that no nation will be able to get everyone out.

‘It is a source of deep sadness for many of us across Nato and no one wanted 20 years of sacrifice to end this way. We will do our best to the very last moment. But it isn’t the end. The Home Secretary and I have been planning the next stage… we will establish a series of processing hubs across the region outside of Afghanista­n for those Afghans we have an obligation to bring to this country.’

Meanwhile, The Mail on Sunday can reveal that Home Secretary Priti Patel is scrambling to proscribe the Taliban as a terrorist group amid fears that hundreds of British jihadis will head to Afghanista­n to join and live under the Islamist regime. The Home Office is now looking urgently to ban the group which has avoided proscripti­on so far, even though the Taliban has harboured terrorist groups such as Al Qaeda and killed 456 British troops in Afghanista­n over the past two decades.

If an organisati­on is on the Government’s list of proscribed groups, it becomes a criminal offence for anyone in Britain to join or even support it, punishable by up to 14 years in jail.

If the situation remains as it is, Ministers fear that British jihadis could join and train under the regime then escape prosecutio­n on their return to Britain.

Sources have told the MoS that Ms Patel is ‘livid’ that the Taliban in Afghanista­n has not been banned already. A source said last night: ‘The fault doesn’t lie with Priti. It goes far back, as no previous Home Secretary has bothered to ban it.’

A Government source told the MoS that MI5 and counter-terrorism units are preparing for the possibilit­y of British jihadis travelling to Afghanista­n. ‘Some will go and train under the Taliban and may come back to launch attacks,’ said the source. ‘Others may take their families with them and live under the Taliban’s Islamic government.’

Britain has promised to evacuate about 6,000 UK citizens and Afghan staff from the country, but that is looking increasing­ly unlikely.

Yesterday, amid chaotic scenes, Britons were told to either go to Kabul airport or the nearby Baron Hotel, where their papers could be processed. But some found their path blocked by makeshift Taliban checkpoint­s.

Shadow Foreign Secretary Lisa Nandy wrote to Mr Raab saying that hundreds of her Afghan constituen­ts had contacted her to say that their relatives – some with young children – were stranded or beaten at checkpoint­s.

Last night, a Briton and his wife told how they came under fire from Taliban militants at a checkpoint as they headed to the hotel. Their driver was injured in the shooting.

As the British man tried to explain to the militants that he was a foreign national he was beaten and threatened.

He told ITV News: ‘My wife came out of the car, she was trying to save me and then they start beating my wife as well. They are warning me that if they see me next to that checkpoint they will kill us.’

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