The British government detonated Afghanistan’s exit while hundreds of left behind – News2IN
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The British government detonated Afghanistan’s exit while hundreds of left behind

The British government detonated Afghanistan's exit while hundreds of left behind
Written by news2in

LONDON: The British government on Sunday faces a criticism torrent after the withdrawal of a rush from Afghanistan ends, leaving hundreds who qualify for relocation behind.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson praised the mission of “unlike whatever we have seen in our lives” after England aired more than 15,000 people in the past two weeks.
The army landed back at Brize Norton Airbase in the South UK on Sunday after England was forced to withdraw after the US ally decision to end the 20-year attendance.
Johnson praised the evacuation effort in the “combing conditions” and convinced the military that the decade of the spread “was not in vain” after the control of reclaiming the Taliban.
But officials and the former slammed the failure of the government, showing more Afghans could be saved.
Observer Leftweet Broadsheet quoted the Whistleblower who said thousands of emails from members of parliament and charity for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs highlighted certain Afghans who were at risk of the Taliban takeover not opened.
Foreign Minister Dominic Raab has been very criticized for not leaving a beach vacation immediately when the Taliban took control.
Observer said it sees evidence that an official email account is regulated by a foreign office to receive such a request regularly has 5,000 emails that have not been opened last week.
This said, including a message from the Office of the Ministers and Labor Labor Opposition, Keir Starmer.
“They can’t know (how many people are left) because they haven’t even read email,” Whistleblower was quoted.
The overseas office replies that the crisis team works 24/7 “to repair emails and calls”.
Officials have provided varied estimates about how many Afghans who qualified not to ride evacuation flights, the latter left Saturday, with the Head of the British Armed Forces General Sir Nick Carter placed this “in hundreds of heights high”.
Sunday Times Rightwing Broadsheet quoted a minister who was not named: “I suspect we can spend 800 to 1,000 more people”.
The same minister slams Raab, claiming he “does nothing” to build relationships with third countries where Afghanistan can enter the British.
The overseas office admitted that Raab had delegated calls to his Afghan colleagues while saying he recently called his Pakistani colleague.
The burdensome report came after Times reported last week that he found the contact details of the staff and work of applicants left behind in the British Embassy complex in Kabul, potentially endangering them.
Public opinion has been shared sharply in the UK for a high profile campaign by former service, Paul or “pen” who runs British animal charity to evacuate their animals and staff from shelter in Kabul.
Farthing managed to fly with a private rented aircraft on Saturday with around 150 cats and dogs on board, landed at Heathrow on Sunday morning.
He was praised as a hero by supporters but opponents questioned ethics using official time and military support to evacuate animals when Afghanistan remained behind.
Tom Tugendhat, a conservative MP and Head of the Select Affairs Committee, told LBC radio that Afghanistan interpreters who had worked for the UK asked him: “Why is my five-year-old child more valuable than your dog?” Richard Dannatt, the former Head of the British Army, told Times Radio that “it looks strange that we give an advantage to a man and many cats and dogs”, adding he doubts Farthing flights that leave Afghanistan.
The focus is why Britain does not prepare better while knowing the dangers faced by former local interpreters and civilians hired locally, said Dannatt.
He called for an investigation of why evacuation “happened in a haphazard and chaotic way”.
Raab admitted in the week’s telegraph that Afghanistan’s situation was “a bitter pill to swallow”.
To deal with the Taliban regime, the UK must build a wider international coalition of regional strength and other UN Security Council members, including countries “with whom we have a difficult relationship”, he wrote.

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