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Pressure mounts on Dominic Raab as situation at Kabul airport becomes more desperate

Pressure mounts on Dominic Raab as situation in Kabul becomes more desperate
Boris Johnson has backed his besieged Foreign Secretary (Pictures: AFP/Reuters/Rex)

Dominic Raab has come under further pressure after new claims emerged of him failing to engage with Afghan counterparts until the Taliban had closed in on Kabul.

The Foreign Secretary has faced calls to resign in recent days for being on holiday during the Afghanistan crisis.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson gave Mr Raab his backing on Friday, telling reporters he ‘absolutely’ has full confidence in him.

But that was before claims surfaced in the Daily Mail suggesting Mr Raab did not pick up the phone to other ministers until Sunday, when the Afghan capital fell to insurgents, because he was on holiday.

And The Times has since reported that witnesses saw the Cabinet minister swimming and using a paddleboard on the last day of his beach break, in which he stayed at a five-star hotel on the Greek island of Crete.

Mr Raab was already in the firing line after it emerged he delegated a call about repatriating Afghan interpreters, while away on August 13, to a junior minister, a decision that resulted in the phone conversation with the Afghan foreign minister not taking place and possibly delaying taking them to safety.

The Foreign Secretary returned to the UK on Monday to begin dealing with the unfolding debacle in person.

Asked about the latest allegations, the Foreign Office highlighted Mr Raab’s statement issued on Friday – comments made before the claims emerged.

Boris Johnson insists he has confidence in Dominic Raab
Foreign Secratary Dominic Raab walks to the rear entrance of Downing Street in Westminster, London, as he faces mounting pressure to resign after it emerged a phone call requested by his officials to help interpreters flee Afghanistan was not made. Picture date: Friday August 20, 2021. PA Photo. Mr Raab was holidaying on the Greek island of Crete when officials in his department suggested he
Foreign Secratary Dominic Raab faces mounting pressure to resign (Picture: PA)
TOPSHOT - Afghan people gather along a road as they wait to board a U S military aircraft to leave the country, at a military airport in Kabul on August 20, 2021 days after Taliban's military takeover of Afghanistan. (Photo by Wakil KOHSAR / AFP) (Photo by WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP via Getty Images)
Afghan people gather along a road as they wait to board a US military aircraft (Picture: AFP via Getty)

Mr Raab earlier this week insisted he had been ‘talking to foreign counterparts’ while out of the country, as well as taking part in emergency Government Cobra meetings remotely and dealing with his team in London on an ‘hour-by-hour basis’.

Attempts to repatriate British nationals and Afghans who supported UK efforts in the country are continuing against the clock as the situation at Kabul airport appeared to worsen.

Desperate Afghans have reportedly been crushed to death as thousands push to make it inside to get on a flight out of the country.

The US embassy in Afghanistan is recommending that US citizens avoid travelling to the airfield ‘because of potential security threats outside the gates’, with reports of violent scenes and overcrowding at the main entrance and at Taliban checkpoints.

Sky News said they had spoken to British troops at the airport who had served in Afghanistan previously, and who said the queues, crushing and desperation of people to get out of the country were the worst scenes they had witnessed during their service.

Handout photo issued by the Ministry of Defence (MoD) of members of the UK Armed Forces taking part in the evacuation of entitled personnel from Kabul airport in Afghanistan. Issue date: Friday August 20, 2021. PA Photo. See PA story POLITICS Afghanistan. Photo credit should read: LPhot Ben Shread/MoD/Crown Copyright/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
Attempts to repatriate British nationals and Afghans who supported UK efforts in the country are continuing against the clock (Picture: PA)
PICTURE BLURRED AT SOURCE Handout photo issued by the Ministry of Defence (MoD) of members of the UK Armed Forces taking part in the evacuation of entitled personnel from Kabul airport in Afghanistan. Issue date: Friday August 20, 2021. PA Photo. See PA story POLITICS Afghanistan. Photo credit should read: LPhot Ben Shread/MoD/Crown Copyright/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
Members of the UK Armed Forces taking part in the evacuation (Picture: PA)

Time is running out to repatriate people to the UK ahead of US President Joe Biden’s August 31 deadline to withdraw most remaining US troops.

On Friday he did not commit to extending it, in a move that is likely to mean British troops must return home at the same time, as the airport cannot be held without US enforcement.

Reports have suggested the last evacuation flight could be as soon as Tuesday, in order to give British troops enough time to leave safely.

The Prime Minister said 1,000 people had been brought to the UK on both Thursday and Friday, with most of them UK nationals or those who had assisted British efforts in Afghanistan.

Despite claims that the situation in the country is improving, a former Royal Marine-turned charity director in Afghanistan said he cannot get to Kabul airport without putting his life at risk.

TOPSHOT - Afghans gather on a roadside near the military part of the airport in Kabul on August 20, 2021, hoping to flee from the country after the Taliban's military takeover of Afghanistan. (Photo by Wakil KOHSAR / AFP) (Photo by WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP via Getty Images)
Afghans gather on a roadside near the military part of the airport in Kabul (Picture: AFP via Getty)

Paul Farthing, known as ‘Pen’, has been trying to get all of his 25 staff from animal welfare charity Nowzad, their families and more than 100 dogs and cats out of the country as the Taliban complete their takeover.

As the chaos at Kabul airport shows no sign of letting up, Mr Farthing said he feels ‘completely numb at the incompetence’ of the Government’s efforts so far.

Dominic Dyer, who has been campaigning for Mr Farthing, said, however, that progress had been made in acquiring visas for all 68 people in his entourage, but said the ‘main obstacle’ is still ‘getting through the airport’ where thousands of people are scrambling to escape.

Meanwhile, a head teacher in Nottingham said two of her pupils are expected home from Afghanistan in the ‘next couple of days’ after a terrifying ordeal.

According to the Nottingham Post, Nargas Ziahe flew out to Afghanistan more than six weeks ago following the death of an uncle, but became trapped in Parwan province with her brother Omar, five, and sister Asma, nine, following the lightning Taliban advance.

Amanda Dawson, head of Mellers Primary School which Omar and Asma attend, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘They are safe, they are in the airport and, unless the airport falls of course, they are safe and we are expecting them to be home in the next couple of days.’

With difficult scenes still unfolding, a former chairman of Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee has called for its current membership to investigate whether an ‘intelligence failure’ led to the chaotic withdrawal of allied forces.

Dominic Grieve, a former Conservative MP and attorney general, told Sky News: ‘I think if they had known this was going to happen, would the US withdrawal have proceeded in the way it did?

‘It must be an intelligence failure that one should end up with thousands of people crowding into an airport seeking to leave a country when it has been triggered by military decisions by the United States as to how it was going to conduct its withdrawal.’

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

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