The combined effort has evacuated more than 114,000 people since Aug. Norwegian Foreign Minister Ine Eriksen Soereide on Tuesday called for the US withdrawal from Afghanistan to be extended beyond August 31, as a plane with 157 people who had been evacuated from Afghanistan landed in Oslo, bringing the country’s total evacuations to 374 people.Aug 30 (Reuters) - The United States and allies are hurrying to evacuate as many people from Afghanistan as possible before an Aug. All local workers from the Swiss development office as well as their close family members were able to leave Kabul or were safe at the capital’s airport, he said. Switzerland’s Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis on Tuesday said the country had evacuated 292 people. Spain has said it has evacuated more than 800 Afghans from Kabul in recent days. Other effortsĪn array of countries continue to evacuate smaller numbers of their nationals and some Afghans. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said he is open to talking to the Taliban about Turkey’s future role in the country. Turkey was meant to secure the Kabul airport after foreign troops withdrew, but the plan was thrown into uncertainty amid the Taliban’s swift rise. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu has said Turkey has so far evacuated 1,404 people from Afghanistan – 1,061 of them Turkish nationals and 343 nationals of “various countries”. FranceĪ French official on Tuesday said they will end their evacuations from Taliban-controlled Afghanistan later this week if the US sticks to a plan to pull its troops out at the end of August.Ībout 2,000 French nationals and Afghans have in recent days been evacuated by France via a military base in Abu Dhabi, after President Emmanuel Macron said the country was opening its arms to people under threat from the Taliban. But Wallace told Sky News it is unlikely Biden will agree. The UK and other allies are pressing Biden to extend the evacuation past the end-of-the-month date. On Tuesday, the United Kingdom’s defence minister said the UK had evacuated more than 2,000 people from Kabul during the past 24 hours bringing the total number of people removed from the country since August 14 to 8,600. With the US in control of the airport, that figure appeared to encompass all people evacuated by US and NATO allies since August 14. Since August 14, the US has “evacuated and facilitated the evacuation” of approximately 58,700 people, according to the White House. In the previous 24 hours, 28 US military flights evacuated about 10,400 people, up from about 3,900 people evacuated on US flights in the 24-hour period before that, from Saturday to Sunday. On Tuesday, the White House reported that during the 24-hour period from 07:00 GMT on August 23 to 07:00 GMT on August 24, US military flights had evacuated about 12,700 people. In recent days, the US evacuation effort has surged, transporting individuals to 14 temporary installations across Europe and the Middle East, including in Qatar, UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Italy, Spain and Germany as of Monday. US Defense Department Spokesman John Kirby on Monday said that “thousands” of US citizens remain in the country, without elaborating. The overall number of Afghans seeking relocation to the US remains unclear, although the International Rescue Committee, a rights group, had previously said that some 300,000 Afghan civilians were affiliated with the US government during its 20 years in Afghanistan. US officials have said they are prioritising US citizens, Afghans who worked for the US government and are thus eligible for special visas, as well as Afghans who are eligible for refugee status – a category expanded in early August. The US continues to conduct the widest evacuation effort from Afghanistan of any country. A spokesperson for the group restated that position on Tuesday, saying there would be “no extensions”.Īs foreign governments face a ticking clock, here is the status of those conducting the largest evacuations from Afghanistan. The Taliban, meanwhile, has repeatedly warned against any extension of foreign troop deployments, saying it would cross a “red line”.
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