U.S soldiers stand guard at the airport tower near an evacuation control checkpoint during ongoing evacuations at Hamid Karzai International Airport, in Kabul. (Photo | AP)
U.S soldiers stand guard at the airport tower near an evacuation control checkpoint during ongoing evacuations at Hamid Karzai International Airport, in Kabul. (Photo | AP)

Poland ends Kabul evacuation as clock ticks down on airlift; Mexico welcomes Afghan scribes

Several countries have not said yet when they plan to end their operations, perhaps hoping to avoid yet another fatal crush at an airport, one of the last ways out of the country.

WARSAW: Poland ended its evacuations from Afghanistan, but other European nations vowed Wednesday to press on for as long as possible, as the clock ticks down on a dramatic airlift of people fleeing Taliban rule ahead of a full American withdrawal.

President Joe Biden said he will stick to his August 31 deadline for completing the US pullout, as the Taliban insisted he must, ramping up pressure on the already risky operation to fly people out of Kabul.

European allies pressed for more time but lost the argument, and as a practical matter, they may be forced to end their evacuations before the last American troops leave.

Several countries have not said yet when they plan to end their operations, perhaps hoping to avoid yet another fatal crush at an airport, one of the last ways out of the country.

The Taliban wrested back control of Afghanistan nearly 20 years after they were ousted in a US-led invasion following the 9/11 attacks, which al-Qaida orchestrated while being sheltered by the group.

Their return to power has pushed many Afghans to flee, fearing reprisals or a return to the brutal rule they imposed when they last ran the country.

Thousands of people are still thought to be trying to leave, and it's not clear that all of them will be able to before the end of the month.

But any decision by Biden to stay longer could reignite fighting between the Taliban and Western troops running the airlift.

"Due to extreme tension on the ground. and the scheduled departure of American forces, these evacuations are a true race against time," French government spokesman Gabriel Attal said Wednesday.

He said that his country's evacuation would likely end "a few hours, maybe a few days ahead" of the American departure.

The Taliban said they would allow normal commercial air traffic to resume when they assume control of the airport after August 31, but it's unclear whether airlines would be willing to fly into an airport controlled by the militants.

With the deadline looming, Marcin Przydacz, a Polish deputy foreign minister, said Wednesday that Poland had evacuated its last group after consulting with US and British officials.

"After a long analysis of reports on the security situation, we cannot risk the lives of our diplomats and of our soldiers any longer," Przydacz said.

A number of troops will remain briefly to wrap up operations, Przydacz said.

Poland has used over a dozen planes to bring hundreds of evacuees to Warsaw.

Some later travelled on to other countries.

The Czech Republic declared its own evacuation mission complete last week, and Hungary said it plans to end its operations soon.

The White House said Wednesday around 19,000 people were evacuated from Kabul over the last 24 hours.

It said the US has evacuated or facilitated the evacuation of around 82,300 people since the Taliban takeover in mid-August.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said as many as 1,500 Americans may be awaiting evacuation, a figure that suggests that part of the US-led airlift could be completed before the Tuesday deadline.

The State Department estimates there were about 6,000 Americans who wanted to leave Afghanistan when the airlift began August 14, and about 4,500 of them have been evacuated so far, Blinken said.

Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said the military will "continue to evacuate needed populations all the way to the end".

But he added that in the final days and hours there will have to be a balance as the 5,400 troops in Kabul and critical systems also need to be withdrawn.

In Kabul itself, life has been slow to return to normal, but many people, especially women, are staying inside, fearful of the Taliban or the general instability.

Kabul Mayor Dawood Sultanzoy said many city workers have yet to return to work, with the absence of experienced staff hindering normal operations.

But he said the city has begun to remove the blast walls that became ubiquitous in recent years as the Taliban and other armed groups carried out bombings and other attacks against the Western-backed government.

The Taliban say the decades of war are over and there will be no revenge attacks on people who opposed them.

But many Afghans distrust the group, and there have been reports of summary executions and other abuses in areas under Taliban control.

Many fear a return to the Taliban's hard-line Islamic rule of the 1990s, when women were largely confined to their homes.

Chaos at the Kabul airport has transfixed the world after the Taliban captured most of Afghanistan in a matter of days this month.

Afghans poured onto the tarmac last week, and some clung to a US military transport plane as it took off, later plunging to their deaths.

At least seven people died that day, and another seven died Sunday in a panicked stampede.

Thousands have thronged the airport in the days since, and the US and its allies have worked to speed the evacuation, sometimes flying people out before their paperwork is fully processed and bringing them to transit points.

On Wednesday, a group of 51 people landed in Uganda, which became the first African nation to serve as a transit point.

European nations, including American allies Germany and the United Kingdom, had pressed for a longer window to continue evacuations.

However, Biden has stuck to the August date, even after an emergency online summit of the Group of Seven nations.

That left European nations with no choice but to abide by the deadline.

"That the overall deployment literally stands and falls with the stance of the militarily strongest member of the alliance, the US, was always clear to us," German Chancellor Angela Merkel said in a speech to parliament.

"We will continue the evacuation operation for as long as possible," she added, without specifying when operations would end.

For now, the US military coordinates all air traffic in and out of the Kabul airport.

Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen tweeted that "people with legal documents" will be able to fly out of Kabul airport via commercial flights after the August deadline.

On Wednesday, a stream of military planes took off from the airfield as evacuees lined up on the tarmac.

The desperate remained outside, some standing knee-deep in sewage and waving identity documents at Western soldiers in hopes of being allowed to go beyond the barbed wire fencing and onto a flight out.

While the final withdrawal date just under a week away, analyst Patricia Lewis said the practical deadline for the evacuations to stop was "the next couple of days."

"There's a huge amount of stuff that has to be done, including getting all the people out who are doing the job and all the equipment," said Lewis, who is the director of the international security programme at Chatham House, an international think tank.

"All of the allies are highly dependent on the US for military cover, particularly air cover," Lewis said.

"They can't put their own people at risk, so it really depends on when the US starts packing up."

Mexico welcomes 124 Afghan refugee journalists, families

Mexico welcomed a group of 124 Afghan media workers and their families Wednesday after the group fled their country because of the Taliban takeover.

The group arrived aboard a Qatar Emiri Air Force flight to Mexico City in the pre-dawn hours.

The Foreign Relations Department said the Afghans had worked for "various media outlets" and had requested humanitarian visas because of the Taliban's hostility toward journalists.

The New York Times reported that a group of its journalists had been taken in by Mexico and arrived Wednesday.

Mexico accepted its first group of refugees from Afghanistan on Tuesday, when five women and one man arrived in Mexico City.

The young women, who had to travel through six countries to reach Mexico, have competed in robotics competitions.

They fled Afghanistan after the Taliban took control of the country earlier this month.

The Taliban have been hostile to women working or going to school after a certain age.

The offer of safe haven to Afghan journalists is a sharp contrast in a country that is unable to protect its own reporters.

Press groups say nine journalists were killed in Mexico in 2020, making it the most dangerous country for reporters outside of war zones, and at least five have been killed so far in 2021.

Japan prioritizes evacuation of its citizens

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga says Japan plans to prioritize the safe evacuation of Japanese citizens and embassy staff out of Afghanistan using Self-Defense Force aircraft.

He also said Wednesday that Japan will closely cooperate with Group of Seven leading industrial nations and other countries "to stop Afghanistan from becoming the hotbed of terrorism again, to avoid an ongoing humanitarian crisis there and to protect the rights of women."

Stability and recovery of the geopolitically important country "is in Japan's strong national interest," he said.

Japan, starting Monday, sent three Self-Defense Force transport aircraft, a C-2 and two C-130s, to evacuate Japanese nationals and local staff who worked for the embassy and Japanese development agencies.

Asked if Tokyo is willing to accept refugees from Afghanistan, Suga did not give a clear answer, saying only: "Japan will cooperate with other involved nations while paying attention to the situation each country faces."

Four Russian planes sent to Kabul to evacuate 500

The Russian Defence Ministry says four planes sent to evacuate more than 500 people from Afghanistan have taken off from Kabul and are en route to Russia.

The Defence Ministry said Wednesday the planes would carry the nationals of Russia, Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Ukraine from Kabul.

The flights marked the first such airlift for Russia since evacuations from Kabul began.

Teams of medical workers are present on each plane to provide assistance to the evacuees if necessary.

The evacuations will be carried out upon orders of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Separately, a representative of the Afghan community in Russia said Wednesday the Russian Embassy in Kabul has allowed more than 1,000 Afghan citizens to come to Russia once the Kabul airport reopens for regular flights.

The Interfax news agency quoted Ghulam Mohammad Jalal as saying they include Afghan citizens of Russian origin, Afghan students studying in Russian universities and those who hold Russian residence or work permits.

Lithuania evacuates 50 interpreters from Kabul

A plane carrying the first group of Afghan interpreters who had worked with Lithuanian forces in Afghanistan has touched down in the Baltic country.

The Defense Ministry said Wednesday that a total of 50 people were flown from Kabul via Warsaw, Poland.

They are the first of 115 interpreters who worked with Lithuanian forces in Afghanistan from 2005 to 2013, and Lithuania plans to bring all of them out of the country.

The second group is expected to land in Vilnius later in the day.

Meanwhile in Norway, two planes from Afghanistan with a total of 278 passengers landed in Oslo, Norwegian news agency NTB reported.

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