Pets over people: UK PM under pressure over Afghan evacuation emails

Downing Street and Defence Secretary Ben Wallace have denied that UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson gave any orders to prioritise pets during evacuations from Kabul airport last year.

The controversy has posed fresh questions to Johnson, amid the "partygate" scandal and other allegations of sleaze in his government.
Reuters

The controversy has posed fresh questions to Johnson, amid the "partygate" scandal and other allegations of sleaze in his government.

The UK government has denied that embattled Prime Minister Boris Johnson had prioritised pets over people in the chaotic evacuation of Afghanistan as Kabul fell to the Taliban.

"The PM didn't make any individual decisions about evacuations," Cabinet Minister Therese Coffey told Sky News on Thursday.

"A lot of people will claim that the PM is involved in supporting their particular pet projects, but the PM said he wasn't involved in individual decisions," she said.

Foreign Ministry emails from August, newly released by a parliamentary committee, showed diplomats referring to a decision taken by Johnson to evacuate the staff and animals of the Nowzad animal charity.

Johnson at the time denied insisting on preferential treatment for the charity, which sheltered dogs and cats in Afghanistan and was run by a media-savvy former soldier, Paul "Pen" Farthing.

"Equivalent charity Nowzad, run by an ex-Royal Marine, has received a lot of publicity and the PM has just authorised their staff and animals to be evacuated," one email said, referring to other charities wanting the same treatment.

READ MORE: UK govt emails suggest Johnson authorised animal evacuations from Kabul

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Mounting pressure

Senior Conservative MP Tom Tugendhat said it was possible that some civil servants had exploited Johnson's name after his wife Carrie — an animal rights campaigner and friend of Farthing — reportedly intervened.

"You'll have to read the emails and see whether you think that there were others who were working around the system — that I can't answer," the foreign affairs committee chairman told BBC radio.

Downing Street reiterated on Wednesday Johnson's denials about Nowzad in light of the leaked emails. Defence Secretary Ben Wallace insisted he had been given no order from the prime minister to prioritise pets.

But Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesperson Layla Moran called for the prime minister to "immediately make a public statement (about Nowzad) to correct the record and for once tell the truth".

The rushed nature of the Kabul evacuation meant many Afghans, who had served the British in various capacities, were left behind. The UK has been working since to repatriate those it can reach under Taliban control.

The issue has fuelled questions about Johnson's truthfulness as he awaits an internal inquiry into lockdown-breaching parties that could determine his fate as leader.

After launching its own investigation, London's Metropolitan Police force was said to be poring over the "partygate" findings by a senior civil servant, holding up the report's release.

There was uncertainty about when civil servant Sue Gray's report into the Downing Street parties would come out. 

Johnson's spokesperson said the government had yet to receive it, and remained committed to publishing it in full.

READ MORE: Johnson opponents facing government intimidation: Conservative lawmaker

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