City
Epaper

UK's evacuation from Afghanistan a 'humiliation': Conservative lawmaker

By ANI | Updated: August 30, 2021 15:15 IST

UK Conservative lawmaker Tobias Ellwood has called the evacuation of personnel and Afghans who worked for the British troops during the 20-year-long presence of the US-led coalition in the country a "humiliation."

Open in App

UK Conservative lawmaker Tobias Ellwood has called the evacuation of personnel and Afghans who worked for the British troops during the 20-year-long presence of the US-led coalition in the country a "humiliation."

"After 20 years, we are now out, and we have very little to show for it. We lacked the strategy, the statecraft, the patience to see it through. This manner of our departure is a humiliation," Ellwood, who chairs the parliament's Defense Select Committee, told Sky News on Sunday evening, as the last plane with people evacuated from the Central Asian country was about to land at the Royal Air Force base in Oxfordshire, England.

The lawmaker and former soldier said that there is a "litany of concerns" about Operation Pitting, as the mission to get UK citizens and eligible Afghans out of Afghanistan following the Taliban (a terrorist organization banned in Russia) takeover was code-named.

The British government is facing strong criticism for reportedly leaving behind hundreds of Afghans who were eligible for relocation in the UK behind.

According to the opposition Labour Party, thousands of letters and emails relating to Afghan refugees were not opened by Foreign Office officials dealing with the operation.

Junior Foreign Minister James Cleverly on Monday admitted receiving a "huge influx of correspondence" from charities, individuals and members of parliament, but said that the government's priority was to evacuate those who had received approval and had been called forward.

"Obviously, the priority was for the people who were at the airport, who had the right documentation, to actually get on the airplanes when we still had control of the airport", Cleverly told Sky News.

According to the UK Ministry of Defense, nearly 15,000 British nationals, Afghan staff and their families, and others at risk were evacuated from Kabul since Operation Pitting began on August 13. (ANI/Sputnik)

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: ukKabulTalibanSky NewsTalibansTaliban movementProminent taliban
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalPakistan-Afghanistan Conflict: At Least 15 Civilians Killed, Over 100 Injured in Pakistani Artillery Fire in Kandahar

InternationalIndia to Reopen Embassy in Kabul Four Years After Taliban Takeover of Afghanistan

InternationalStorm Amy Live Tracker Map: Weather Warning Issued as Cyclonic Storm Hits UK; Check Real Time Updates on Windy

LifestyleGanpati Visarjan in London: Videos Show Indians Taking Out Ganesh Idol Immersion Procession With Band

MumbaiUniversity of Bristol Chooses Mumbai for Its First Overseas Campus, Set to Open in September 2026

International Realted Stories

InternationalFour more people die of dengue in Bangladesh, 2025 death toll crosses 340

InternationalPoland: 23 people injured after trams and bus collide in Warsaw

InternationalIndia-Germany bolster defence ties, focus on co-production and regional security

International"No justification, no looking away and no whitewashing": EAM asserts India's "right to defend" against terrorism at SCO

InternationalSouth Korea's FM calls nuclear-free Korean Peninsula 'imperative', never to be abandoned