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Afghan evacuations enter final phase amid threats of more attacks - Al Jazeera English

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The last British flight evacuating civilians from Afghanistan left Kabul on Saturday, bringing to an end an operation that has airlifted almost 15,000 Afghan and British citizens in the two weeks since the Taliban took control.

The United States forces helping to evacuate Afghans desperate to flee Taliban rule were on alert on Saturday for more attacks after an ISIL-affiliated suicide bombing killed at least 175 people. Thirteen US service members and 162 Afghans died in the attack outside Kabul airport.

Thursday’s attack was claimed by an ISIL offshoot in Afghanistan – the Islamic State in Khorasan Province, ISKP (ISIS-K).

The US military on Saturday said it killed two members of the group in a drone strike on the group’s eastern stronghold.

The development comes as the US forces helping to evacuate Afghans desperate to flee Taliban rule issued an alert on Saturday of possible attacks at Kabul airport. The US believes there are still “specific, credible” threats against the airport after the deadly bombings.

Here are the latest updates:


On Afghanistan, Pakistan walks tightrope of optimism and caution

Pakistan’s government, long accused of providing overt logistical and other support to the Afghan Taliban, will walk a fine line between optimism at having a more friendly government in Kabul and potential security blowback on its own soil, analysts say.

Pakistani officials, however, told Al Jazeera the country has no favourites in Afghanistan, and continues to back “a negotiated political settlement” that would see “an inclusive government” formed in its northwestern neighbour.

Read more here.


France in talks with Taliban over evacuations

French President Emmanuel Macron said Saturday that discussions were underway with the Taliban through Qatar to “protect and repatriate” Afghans at risk since this month’s takeover by the group.

Evacuations are planned jointly with Qatar and may involve “airlift operations”, Macron said at a news conference after a summit in Baghdad.

He added that France, which ended its evacuations from Afghanistan on Friday, had evacuated 2,834 people since August 17.


Plane transporting Afghans lands in Ukraine

UK and Germany seek common G7 approach on Taliban

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and German Chancellor Angela Merkel discussed the situation in Afghanistan and agreed on the need for international aid and a common approach by the G7 to the future government of Afghanistan.

“The Prime Minister and Chancellor resolved to work, alongside the rest of the G7, to put in place the roadmap on dealing with any new Afghan government discussed at last week’s leaders’ meeting,” Johnson’s office said in a statement.


Taliban condemn US drone attack, prepare to set up new Afghan government

The Taliban condemned on Saturday a U.S. drone strike against ISIL (ISIS) fighters following Thursday’s suicide attack outside Kabul airport, with a spokesman describing the operation as a “clear attack on Afghan territory”.

Zabihullah Mujahid said the Taliban expected to take full control of Kabul airport very shortly, once US forces leave, and would announce a full cabinet in the coming days, Reuters news agency reported.

He said officials had already been appointed to run key institutions including the ministries of public health and education and the central bank. He also said he expected the serious economic turbulence which has hit the Afghani currency to ease soon.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid [File: Rahmat Gul/AP Photo]

Two Afghan athletes arrive in Tokyo to compete in Paralympics

Two athletes from Afghanistan have arrived in Tokyo to compete in the Paralympics, the International Paralympic Committee said.

The two-person team of Zakia Khudadadi and Hossain Rasouli had flown from Kabul to Paris before continuing on to Tokyo, the IPC said.


US troops have begun leaving Kabul airport: Pentagon

United States troops have begun their withdrawal from Kabul airport, Pentagon spokesperson John Kirby told reporters.

At the briefing, US Army Major General William Taylor said two ISIS-K planners were killed and another wounded in Friday’s drone strike in Nangarhar province, eastern Afghanistan.

U.S. Army soldiers with the 82nd Airborne Division check evacuees during an evacuation at Hamid Karzai International Airport, Kabul, Afghanistan, August 25, 2021 [US Marine Corps/Staff Sgt. Victor Mancilla/Handout via Reuters]

Cash crunch in Kabul an ‘ominous sign’: AJ correspondent

Al Jazeera’s Rob McBride said life in the Afghan capital Kabul is a “very mixed picture, and you see some conflicting signs which makes you wonder, two weeks after the Taliban took control of Kabul, which way the country is headed”.

He said many government ministries have reopened, although some have not, and schools and universities remain closed.

“More significantly perhaps for many people in Kabul, and it’s not a good sign, the banks once more are closed. This has been an ongoing problem – this cash crunch here in Kabul since the collapse of the government,” he said.

While some banks had re-opened last week with strict withdrawal limits imposed, they were closed again on Saturday – the first working day of the week – leaving many people unable to access cash.

“That has caused an awful lot of anxiety … the banking sector in particular is a very ominous sign looking forward,” McBride said.


UK general: ‘heartbreaking’ to leave people behind

The UK’s Chief of Defence Staff, General Sir Nick Carter has called the country’s withdrawal from Afghanistan “heartbreaking.”

A Royal Air Force plane carrying UK diplomatic staff and soldiers landed at the RAF Brize Norton airbase northwest of London early Saturday morning.

Flights bringing U.K. citizens and Afghan civilians from the Afghan capital have largely ended.

Carter, Britain’s top military officer, expressed regret that the UK had not been able to evacuate all of the Afghans who had aided British forces over the years.


Kabul evacuations ‘finally in the end game’: AJ correspondent

Al Jazeera’s Rob McBride, reporting from Kabul, said that since Friday evening the US military has been pulling back its forces and giving up its guard posts to the Taliban on the outer perimeter of Kabul airport and in some positions inside the airport itself ahead of the final withdrawal of its troops by August 31.

“You do get a sense this Saturday evening here in Kabul that this long, drawn out, often chaotic and traumatic evacuation process [is] finally in the end game,” he said.

McBride said there are still crowds of people at the airport still hoping to flee the country, and some firing by Taliban forces trying to keep crowds of people back.

“I think many people will have given up by now the hope of getting on one of these flights, but for people that are still determined to do so, it will probably exacerbate the situation and make them even more desperate to get on,” he said.

“But certainly the chances of them getting on to a flight are diminishing as we see fewer and fewer of these large, heavy transport aircraft arriving and taking off from Kabul.”


‘Evacuation of Turkish personnel, citizens from Kabul done in less than 48 hours’: Defence chief

Turkish personnel and all Turkish citizens who wish to leave the country have been evacuated from Afghanistan’s capital Kabul in a span of less than 48 hours, Turkey’s national defence minister announced.

At a welcoming ceremony in the capital Ankara for troops arriving from Afghanistan, Hulusi Akar said the evacuation was done through an air bridge between Kabul and Pakistan’s capital Islamabad with eight airplanes and two helicopters.

An A400 M type transport aircraft of the Turkish Air Forces during evacuation of Turkish citizen in Kabul international Hamid Karzai airport [File: Turkish Defence Ministry Press Service/AFP]

Iran’s Khamenei blames US for Afghan conflict

Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei blamed the US for the current conflict in neighboring Afghanistan and the standoff over the Iranian nuclear program, saying there is no difference between US President Joe Biden and his predecessor Donald Trump.

In his first meeting with the newly-appointed Cabinet led by President Ebrahim Raeisi, Khamenei said there is a “predatory wolf” behind the scenes of US foreign policy that “sometimes turns into a cunning fox”.


UK, Germany seek common G7 approach on Taliban

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson and German Chancellor Angela Merkel discussed the situation in Afghanistan and agreed on the need for international aid and a common approach by the G7 to the future government of Afghanistan.

“The Prime Minister and Chancellor resolved to work, alongside the rest of the G7, to put in place the roadmap on dealing with any new Afghan government discussed at last week’s leaders’ meeting,” Johnson’s office said in a statement.

“The Prime Minister stressed that any recognition and engagement with the Taliban must be conditional on them allowing safe passage for those who want to leave the country and respecting human rights,” the statement added.


Last UK civilian evacuation flight ends

The last British flight evacuating civilians from Afghanistan has departed Kabul airport.

The UK’s ambassador to Afghanistan, Laurie Bristow, said earlier the time had come to end airlifting, which led to the evacuation of almost 15,000 Afghan and British citizens over the past two weeks.

“It’s time to close this phase of the operation down but we haven’t forgotten the people who still need to leave, and we will do everything we can to help them,” he said in a statement at Kabul airport released by the foreign ministry.

Read more here.


Taliban deploys extra forces around Kabul airport

The Taliban has deployed extra forces around Kabul’s airport to prevent large crowds from gathering.

The Taliban set up new layers of checkpoints on roads leading to the airport, some manned by uniformed fighters with Humvees and night-vision goggles captured from Afghan security forces.

Taliban fighters stand guard as Afghans walk through the main entrance gate of Kabul airport to leave Afghanistan in Kabul [Wakil Kohsar/AFP]

‘Just the clothes on me’: Afghans escape to new US life

Wazhma left everything behind to escape after the Taliban took control of Afghanistan, aspiring for a life “free of threats” in the US.

In a facility in the UAE, temporarily hosting Afghan evacuees heading to other countries, the 21-year-old medical student struggled to overcome the terror she experienced during the last days at home.

“My husband worked for the US embassy,” brown-haired Wazhma told the AFP news agency just hours before she was due to board a US-bound flight. “I only took the clothes on me. Nothing more.”


NATO ambassador: Italy ‘not abandoning’ those left

The Italian NATO Ambassador in Afghanistan Stefano Pontecorvo stressed the country was “not abandoning” those it had been unable to evacuate from Afghanistan.

Italy’s final evacuation flight of refugees from Afghanistan landed at an airport in Rome carrying 58 Afghan citizens.

Speaking at the airport after the flight’s arrival Pontecorvo said authorities “did our best, under these circumstances” to evacuate as many people as possible.

“I think we went, we crossed the line between possible and impossible to get in everybody we could,” he said.

Stefano Pontecorvo, NATO senior civilian representative to Afghanistan, leaves the airport after disembarking from Italy’s final evacuation flight [Gregorio Borgia/AP Photo]

Afghans protest at Kabul bank

Hundreds of Afghans protested outside a bank in Kabul as others form long lines at cash machines.

The protesters at New Kabul Bank included many civil servants demanding their salaries, which they said had not been paid for the past three to six months.

They said even though banks reopened three days ago no one has been able to withdraw cash. ATMs are still operating, but withdrawals are limited to about $200 every 24 hours, contributing to the formation of long lines.

Afghans wait for hours to try to withdraw money, in front of Kabul Bank [AP Photo]

Two more planes of Afghan evacuees land in Albania

The Albanian government said 154 Afghans had landed in two separate planes in the capital Tirana.

A government spokesman confirmed the arrival of the first plane with 95 Afghans and the second with 59 Afghans, without giving more details.

After their planes landed at the Tirana international airport, two hours apart, the Afghans were taken to a student campus where they will stay for a couple of weeks before moving to hotels in other cities.

A man receives aid parcels as people leave a plane arriving from Afghanistan at Rinas Airport in Tirana [AFP]

UN issues appeal for humanitarian assistance

A UN agency is warning that worsening drought in Afghanistan threatens the livelihoods of more than seven million people.

The Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) issued an appeal for humanitarian assistance. Adding to the plight of what the agency termed “severe drought” is the economic impact of COVID-19 and the widespread internal displacement of Afghans amid enduring conflict.

Earlier this month, the UN World Food Programme, another Rome-based agency, estimated that some 14 million people – roughly one out of every three Afghans – urgently need food assistance.


Evacuee: World has ‘abandoned’ Afghanistan’s new generation

Until last week, Shabeer Ahmadi was busy covering the news in Afghanistan. But after an excruciating decision to leave his country for an uncertain future in Spain, he is helplessly glued to news feeds on his mobile phone, following every twist in the dramatic end of the evacuation of Afghans from Kabul.

“There is a feeling of desperation in Afghanistan,” he said.

“Imagine if you had made a building for 20 years now, that building is getting destroyed and you cannot go out from that building. It feels very bad. Our education, our hopes for ourselves, for our children, for our future, for our country is all destroyed.”

A selfie photo shows Afghan journalist Shabeer Ahmadi in an undisclosed city in Spain [Shabeer Ahmadi/AP Photo]

UK to end evacuation on Saturday

UK troops will end the evacuation of civilians from Afghanistan on Saturday, armed forces chief General Nick Carter said.

“We’re reaching the end of the evacuation, which will take place during the course of today. And then it will be necessary to bring our troops out on the remaining aircraft,” he told the BBC.

“We haven’t been able to bring everyone out, and that has been heart-breaking. And there have been some very challenging judgements that have had to be made on the ground.

UK troops will end their evacuation of civilians from Afghanistan on Saturday [AFP]

Italy’s final Afghanistan evacuation flight arrives

Italy’s final evacuation flight of refugees from Afghanistan landed at Rome’s Leonardo da Vinci airport.

The Italian Air Force C-130J with 58 Afghan citizens on board arrived on Saturday morning, some 17 hours after it departed from the Kabul airport and after a planned stopover.

Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio said Italy was prepared to work with the United Nations and with countries bordering Afghanistan on what he described as the “more difficult phase”.


OPINION: The threat of ISKP in Afghanistan has been underestimated

On August 26, two suicide bombers killed many Afghans and members of the US military at Kabul airport amid evacuation efforts. The ISKP claimed responsibility for the attack and thus put itself in the international media spotlight.

There are two aspects of this attack that need to be considered. First, ISKP attacked the airport primarily to discredit its rival, the Taliban, in yet another escalation of the larger conflict between Sunni hardline armed groups.

Second, ISKP made it clear that the Taliban will find it hard to keep its promises to ensure the safety and security of civilians, especially women and minorities under its rule.

Read more here.


NATO and US forces ready for more attacks

Western forces running the Afghan airlift braced for more attacks after the US launched a drone strike that killed an ISKP “planner”. The White House said the next few days are likely to be the most dangerous.

“We certainly are prepared and would expect future attempts,” Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told reporters in Washington, DC. “We’re monitoring these threats, very, very specifically, virtually in real time.”


Afghan refugees arrive at Dulles International Airport in the US state of Virginia on Friday after being evacuated from Kabul [Olivier Douliery/AFP]

Taliban says female public health workers can return to work

Taliban announced that female workers from the ministry of public health can return to work, according to Al Jazeera’s Ali Latifi, who is reporting from Kabul.

The announcement comes a few days after Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said all female government employees should stay at home until the Taliban can guarantee their safety.


Report: US attack carried out to prevent future ISKP attacks

A US official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, told the Reuters news agency that the US drone attack was against an ISIL-affiliated group planning “future attacks”.

A Reaper drone, which took off from the Middle East, reportedly struck target while he was in a car with another associate, the official said.

Both are believed to have been killed, the official added.


Most of new Afghan refugees ‘likely’ to end up in Iran, Pakistan

Most of the new Afghan refugees fleeing the country following the takeover of the Taliban are likely to end up in Iran and Pakistan, a refugee group said.

Hardin Lang of Refugees International in the US told Al Jazeera on Saturday that “very difficult weeks and months are coming ahead” for the refugees as they try to escape the country.

He pointed out Iran and Pakistan already host 2.2 million refugees from Afghanistan before the current crisis erupted.

The UN refugee agency UNHCR earlier said up to half a million Afghans could flee in a “worst-case scenario”.


US drone attack kills ISKP ‘planner’ in eastern Afghanistan

An American drone strike in eastern Afghanistan killed a “planner” of the ISIL-affiliated group, a day after an attack outside Kabul’s airport that killed at least 175 Afghans and 13 US troops.

“Initial indications are that we killed the target. We know of no civilian casualties,” a US military statement said late on Friday.

US President Joe Biden promised to retaliate for the suicide blasts in Kabul, confirming the bombings were carried out by ISKP.

“We will hunt you down and make you pay. I will defend our interests and our people with every measure at my command,” he said.

Read more here.


US embassy in Kabul warns Americans to avoid airport

Americans should avoid travelling to the Kabul airport because of security threats, and those near the gates should “leave immediately”, the US Embassy said in a statement.

A senior Taliban commander said some ISKP members had been arrested in connection with the Kabul attack. “They are being interrogated by our intelligence team,” the commander said.


US says it evacuated 4,200 people in 12 hours

The US says it has evacuated about 4,200 people in 12 hours on Friday, following the deadly suicide attack near the airport in Kabul.

“Since August 14, the US has evacuated and facilitated the evacuation of approximately 109,200 people,” the White House said in a statement. “Since the end of July, we have re-located approximately 114,800 people.”


France ends its evacuation operation

France has ended its evacuation operation in Kabul, government ministers announced citing the “security conditions” and looming withdrawal of US troops by the end of the month.

“In exceptionally difficult circumstances, France evacuated nearly 3,000 people,” a joint statement by Defence Minister Florence Parly and Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said.

The ministers added Paris will continue to help the people of Afghanistan “by all possible means”. They said they will work with Taliban officials to ensure that departures from the country are not impeded after August 31.


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