Whistle-blower: UK abandoned supporters in Kabul evacuation

Former UK Foreign Office employee Raphael Marshall said thousands of pleas for help via email were unread during Kabul evacuation.

The former Foreign Office employee estimated that only 5 percent of Afghan nationals who applied to flee under one UK programme received help.
Reuters

The former Foreign Office employee estimated that only 5 percent of Afghan nationals who applied to flee under one UK programme received help.

A whistle-blower has alleged that due to dysfunctional and arbitrary evacuation, Britain’s Foreign Office abandoned many of the nation’s allies in Afghanistan and left them to the mercy of the Taliban during the fall of the capital, Kabul. 

In devastating evidence to a parliamentary committee, Raphael Marshall said on Tuesday thousands of pleas for help via email were unread between August 21 and August 25. 

The former Foreign Office employee estimated that only 5 percent of Afghan nationals who applied to flee under one UK programme received help. At one point, he was the only person monitoring the inbox.

“There were usually over 5,000 unread emails in the inbox at any given moment, including many unread emails dating from early in August," he wrote to the Foreign Affairs Select Committee. 

“These emails were desperate and urgent. I was struck by many titles including phrases such as ‘please save my children’."

Operational pressures

Former Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, who was moved from the Foreign Office to become Justice Secretary after his handling of the crisis, defended his actions.

“Some of the criticism seems rather dislocated from the facts on the ground, the operational pressures that with the takeover of the Taliban, unexpected around the world..." he told the BBC. “I do think that not enough recognition has been given to quite how difficult it was.”

Many who had worked for Western powers or the government worried that the country could descend into chaos or the Taliban could carry out revenge attacks against them.

READ MORE: Thousands of Afghans converge at Kabul airport amid chaotic evacuation

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Many also feared the Taliban would reimpose the harsh interpretation of Islamic law that they relied on when they ran Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001. 

At the time, women had to wear the all-encompassing burqa and be accompanied by a male relative whenever they went outside. The Taliban banned music, cut off the hands of thieves and stoned adulterers.

The Taliban stormed across Afghanistan in late summer, capturing all major cities in a matter of days, as Afghan security forces trained and equipped by the US and its allies melted away. The Taliban took over Kabul on August 15.

READ MORE: UK government under fire after hundreds of Afghans left behind

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