The Columbus Dispatch

Final UK evacuation flight leaves Kabul

‘Haven’t been able to bring everybody out’

- Jill Lawless

LONDON – Britain ended evacuation flights from Kabul airport on Saturday and began bringing troops home, even as the U.K.’S top military officer acknowledg­ed “we haven’t been able to bring everybody out.”

Britain’s defense ministry said the final flight for Afghan citizens had left Kabul and further flights over the weekend will bring home British troops and diplomats, though they might also carry a few remaining U.K. or Afghan civilians.

Britain’s ambassador to Afghanista­n, Laurie Bristow, said from Kabul airport that it was “time to close this phase of the operation now.”

“But we haven’t forgotten the people who still need to leave,” Bristow said in a video posted on Twitter.

A Royal Air Force plane carrying U.K. diplomatic staff and soldiers landed at the RAF Brize Norton airbase northwest of London early Saturday. The troops from the 16 Air Assault Brigade were part of a contingent of 1,000 British soldiers who have been based in Kabul to help run the airlift.

Britain said it has evacuated more

than 14,500 people from Kabul in the past two weeks but that as many as 1,100 Afghans who were entitled to come to the U.K. have been left behind.

Some British lawmakers who have been trying to help stranded constituen­ts and their families believe the total is higher.

“We haven’t been able to bring everybody out, and that has been heartbreak­ing, and there have been some very challengin­g judgments that have had to be made on the ground,” the head of British armed forces, Gen. Nick Carter, told the BBC.

Foreign citizens from around the world and the Afghans who worked with them have sought to leave the country since the Taliban’s swift takeover this month after most U.S. forces departed. More than 100,000 people have been evacuated through Kabul’s airport, according to American officials.

The desperate, chaotic exodus turned deadly on Thursday, when a suicide bomber struck crowds gathered near the airport. The attack killed 169 Afghans, according to a preliminar­y count, and 13 American troops. Two British citizens and the child of another Briton also were among the people killed.

In London, Afghans came to the Afghanista­n and Central Asian Associatio­n

advice center, desperate for news of friends and relatives.

Saraj Deen Safi said he had been unable to make contact with relatives who were near Kabul airport since Thursday’s bomb attack. He said he hoped they would be able to reach a safe European country, but he felt “despaired” at the lack of news.

Although the U.K. has evacuated thousands of former interprete­rs and others who worked with British forces, the advice program coordinato­r for the London associatio­n, Shabnam Nasimi, said she was “devastated” for many others.

“There are many others who indirectly supported our work there to bring about democracy and free speech and a much better society for Afghanista­n,” Nasimi said. “And the fact we haven’t recognized that and now abandoned those people. And these include journalist­s and judges, for instance, who are directly going to be targeted by the Taliban.”

“The future of these individual­s is very bleak,” she said.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson promised Friday to “shift heaven and earth” to get more people from Afghanista­n to Britain by other means, though no concrete details have been offered.

U.K. officials hope some people might be able to leave Afghanista­n over land for neighborin­g countries, where their claims to come to the U.K. could be processed. That will depend on diplomatic coordinati­on and cooperatio­n – not least from the Taliban.

 ?? ALASTAIR GRANT/AP ?? Members of the British armed forces 16 Air Assault Brigade walk to the air terminal after disembarki­ng a RAF Voyager aircraft at Brize Norton, England, as they return from helping in operations to evacuate people from Kabul airport in Afghanista­n.
ALASTAIR GRANT/AP Members of the British armed forces 16 Air Assault Brigade walk to the air terminal after disembarki­ng a RAF Voyager aircraft at Brize Norton, England, as they return from helping in operations to evacuate people from Kabul airport in Afghanista­n.

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