Jumat, 03 September 2021

New Zealand terror attack: 'Violent extremist' carried out stabbings in supermarket, says PM Jacinda Ardern - Sky News

A man, inspired by ISIS ideology, who stabbed at least six people in a supermarket was a "violent extremist" known to the police, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has said.

The man was shot and killed by police within 60 seconds of beginning his attack at a Countdown store in Auckland.

The man was a Sri Lankan national and had been living in New Zealand since 2011.

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NZ PM on 'known threat' attacker

"A violent extremist undertook a terrorist attack on innocent New Zealanders," Jacinda Ardern told a briefing on Friday.

The man cannot be named due to a suppression order currently in place.

He had been known to multiple agencies since 2016, with Ms Ardern confirming she had been personally aware of the individual - adding that she was gutted to hear what had happened.

She said: "This was someone who was known to our national security agencies and was of concern and was being monitored constantly. There are very few that fall into this category."

More on Jacinda Ardern

Police following the man thought he had gone into the New Lynn supermarket to do some shopping, but he pulled out what one witness described as a large knife and started stabbing people.

New Zealand, Auckland attack.- Police at the scene
Image: The attacker was known to police

"There's someone here with a knife ... he's got a knife," a woman is heard saying in one video, posted online after the attack.

Another recorded the sound of ten shots being fired in rapid succession.

A police officer stands outside an Auckland supermarket -   New Zealand authorities said Friday they shot and killed a violent extremist after he entered a supermarket and stabbed and injured several shoppers. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern described the incident as a terror attack. 
PIC:New Zealand Herald/AP
Image: An injured woman is led away from the supermarket following the attack

"We were doing absolutely everything possible to monitor him and indeed the fact that we were able to intervene so quickly, in roughly 60 seconds, shows just how closely we were watching him," Police Commissioner Andrew Coster said.

Described as a "lone wolf", Ms Ardern said the attacker was a "supporter of ISIS" and inspired by extremist ideology.

The man was not allowed to be kept in prison by law, she said.

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NZ police patrol site of terror attack

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NZ terror attack witness 'lucky to even be here'

Of the six wounded people, three were in critical condition, one in serious condition and another in moderate condition, the St John Ambulance Service said in a statement to Reuters.

Ms Ardern said any backlash against the Muslim community "would be wrong", and said the attacker "is who is responsible, no one else".

"What happened today was despicable, it was hateful, it was wrong. It was carried out by an individual, not a faith," she added.

The security in the country will remain at a medium level.

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern addresses a press conference following the Auckland supermarket terror attack at parliament in Wellington, New Zealand, Friday, Sept. 3, 2021. New Zealand authorities say they shot and killed a violent extremist after he entered a supermarket and stabbed and injured six shoppers. Ardern described Friday's incident as a terror attack. (Robert Kitchin/Pool Photo via AP)
Image: Jacinda Ardern said she had personally known of the attacker. Pic: AP

New Zealand has been on alert for attacks since a white supremacist gunman killed 51 people at two mosques in the city of Christchurch on March 15, 2019. In May, four people were stabbed in a supermarket in Dunedin on New Zealand's South Island.

Auckland is on a strict lockdown as it battles an outbreak of the coronavirus. Most businesses are shut and people are generally only allowed to leave their homes to buy groceries, for medical needs, or to exercise.

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2021-09-04 00:02:01Z
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Will Hurricane Ida cause a spike in Covid-19? - BBC News

people evacuate from a flooded neighborhood in LaPlace, Louisiana on 30 August, 2021
Getty Images

Problems caused by Hurricane Ida in southern US states are being compounded by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Fortune has not been kind to Joey Cirilo of late.

In March 2020, his girlfriend - who has a pre-existing heart condition - was left immobilised for weeks with a "really bad" case of Covid-19.

Then this year Mr Cirilo, 36, lost his job at a local charity, leaving him without a steady source of income.

And now, his life has been "completely changed" again, he said, this time because of Hurricane Ida.

The most powerful Atlantic storm of the 2021 hurricane season has forced the evacuation of thousands from Louisiana, Mr Cirilo among them.

The Navy veteran knows of the destruction of hurricanes. Even before he moved to New Orleans years ago, he deployed to nearby Mississippi as a young sailor to help in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

But this time, he and others fear that the damage wrought by floods and winds will be compounded by another scourge, the pandemic.

Only a little over 40% of Louisiana's population is fully vaccinated against the coronavirus - one of the lowest rates in the US - and hospitals are already overburdened.

On 2 September alone, the state's department of public health reported 2,099 new cases and 74 new deaths. The new cases bring the total to over 694,000, with a death toll of over 12,600 in the state.

Now, concerns are mounting that the combination of the storm and the virus may result in Covid-19 outbreaks spreading far beyond areas hit by Ida.

"I don't want to be displaced and also get sick," Mr Cirilo said. "The last thing I want to do is catch Covid and start spreading it to other people. I already have enough that I'm dealing with."

Joey Cirilo
Courtesy of Joey Cirilo

During his visit to Louisiana on Friday, US President Joe Biden promised no community would be left behind in recovery efforts. The government has provided $100m (£72m) in direct assistance to Louisiana, with $500 being given to people to help with immediate needs.

But many of the strategies used to control pandemics are "incompatible" with the requirements of a mass evacuation, said Dr Irwin Redlener of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University.

"In an area that has a high degree of community spread and low vaccination rates, that's a formula for a secondary disaster," he said. "That would turn a shelter into a super-spreader venue."

Such a concern was starkly highlighted on Thursday following reports that approximately 800 residents from seven Louisiana nursing homes had been evacuated to a nearby warehouse.

"These are the most vulnerable people already, sleeping on cots in a warehouse without ventilation. I'm completely speechless," said April Lopes, a Louisiana nursing home staff agency employee.

"There's no way that all of these people aren't going to be impacted by Covid while sharing that space," she predicted.

"There's also families that are staying with each other or other people. There's no way that Covid is not going to blow up again, even worse than it already was."

Cases of Covid-19 - particularly the highly infectious Delta variant - have been spiking across the southern US. Seven of the 10 states in the country with the highest seven-day daily new infection averages are in the region.

Louisiana and Florida are each experiencing their highest rate of deaths per capita since the pandemic began. Nearby Alabama this week reported a record number of new cases, hitting a daily average of 1,500 each day.

Milly Holder, a healthcare worker who was forced to evacuate there last week because her family members in other states, Georgia and Texas, were ill with Covid and she could not stay with them.

"So many people have evacuated to places like Mississippi, Texas, and Alabama. I know for a fact that Mississippi already has an overwhelmed hospital system," said Ms Holder. "If somebody were to come down with [Covid], it would create a potentially horrible snowball effect."

Evacuated residents staying in a hotel
Getty Images

Much of the work stopping the virus from spreading will have to fall to individuals, said Harley Jones, an emergency manager who has been deployed to New Orleans.

"As best as possible, people need to wear masks, avoid crowds, maintain social distance and find ways to wash hands and sanitise," he said.

He acknowledged that it will not be easy with power and water outages and many in need of urgent basic care.

Speaking from a hotel room in Tennessee, Mr Cirilo agreed. He was worried about the virus, he said, "but my mind is kind of now just consumed with thoughts of people back home, how my house is doing, and when I will return".

"It's hard to even think about, even if we're still living in a pandemic."

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2021-09-03 21:06:47Z
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New Zealand supermarket stabbing was 'terrorist attack' says PM Ardern - BBC News - BBC News

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2021-09-03 16:02:22Z
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New Zealand stabbings were 'terror attacks', says Ardern - The Independent

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2021-09-03 09:19:53Z
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Taliban mount charm offensive to win Afghans’ trust - Financial Times

It seemed to be just a typical social media image of a smiling politician holding a bemused stranger’s chubby baby. Except the man was a senior Taliban official sporting a long black beard and large traditional turban and the setting was the Afghan capital, which had just been retaken by the Islamic militants 20 years after they were driven out.

“In the heart of Kabul, I fell in love with a glorious Kabuli child,” Ahmadullah Wasiq, deputy head of the Taliban’s cultural commission, tweeted under the image a day after the last remaining US troops flew out of the country.

Elsewhere in Afghanistan, Taliban-appointed provincial governors have been out on the streets chatting to shoppers and market vendors about their problems, while heavily armed Taliban fighters have posed for selfies with passers-by.

Kissing babies and meeting constituents could be gestures straight from a US election playbook. But for Afghanistan’s new rulers, such political theatre is part of a charm offensive aimed at winning over wary Afghans and persuading them the Taliban are no longer the harsh extremists that brutalised the population during their previous rule, from 1996-2001

“They want to have the support of the people,” Kabul-based political analyst Nasratullah Haqpal said. “They want to be popular with the people and to win hearts and minds. They plan to rule for many, many years and they understand the value of public support.”

Many Afghans remain deeply scarred by the Taliban’s first brutal regime, while young people have heard traumatic stories from their elders. Under the Islamists’ rule, women were barred from leaving their homes unless they were escorted by a male relative and wearing an all-encompassing burka. Beards, caps and traditional dress were mandatory for men, while television and images depicting people were prohibited. Violations of the regime’s medieval interpretation of Islamic rules were punished by public floggings, stoning and even on-the-spot executions.

Memories of the repression — along with fear of retribution against Afghans with links to the previous government and foreign military forces — fuelled the recent chaos at Kabul’s airport as it was overrun by panicked Afghans seeking to escape after the Taliban takeover.

With US troops gone, the Taliban is trying to reassure Afghans — now accustomed to mobile phones, internet access and greater personal and social freedom, especially in Kabul — that they have nothing to fear.

A Taliban fighter walks in a Kabul market. Regime officials have been out on the streets talking to passers-by in an effort to present a friendlier image © Hoshang Hashimi/AFP via Getty Images

“Their biggest challenge right now — more than getting diplomatic recognition — is to persuade the people of Afghanistan to accept them as administrator,” said Avinash Paliwal, deputy director of SOAS University of London’s South Asia Institute. “The Taliban is trying to build a state-citizen consensus of sorts. They are harsh, they are very stringent, but they are trying to govern, for that they need to have appeal among the people.”

Paliwal, author of the book on Afghanistan, My Enemy’s Enemy, said the Taliban wanted to give Afghans the confidence that it was safe for them to go back to work — a move that is critical to keep state machinery and public services from collapsing.

“What they are doing makes perfect political sense,” he said. “They need to get the economy kicking again and for that people have to have confidence in them as not being completely war-crazed maniacs. Holding babies is important so that teachers turn up, bankers turn up and the guy selling kebabs on the side of the road turns up.”

Faces painted out on images of women in a Kabul shop following the Taliban takeover. Many Afghans remain fearful of repression by the Islamists © Aamir Qureshi/AFP via Getty Images

At The Slice Bakery — a popular Kabul hang-out spot where young women and men mingle, the cashier said Taliban officials had visited and sat without troubling anyone, even women customers, while chess playing had continued unhindered. “We know the Taliban were against chess-playing in the past, but so far they haven’t bothered anyone,” said Farzad Karimi, a 23-year-old at a chess board in the café.

Haqpal, 33, whose family hid a television in an underground room during the last Taliban regime, said he believed the group had grown more worldly and was likely to be more selective in its strict enforcement of Islamic principles.

A shopkeeper arranges TV boxes in a Kabul store. Afghans have become accustomed to media and internet access since the Taliban last ruled © Aamir Qureshi/AFP via Getty Images

“They have studied why they collapsed and why the people hated them a lot,” he said. “They do not want to repeat the mistakes in the first era.”

But even as the Taliban work to burnish their image, many Afghans are afraid.

Many individuals linked to the former government are in hiding amid reports that some Taliban are hunting old enemies and outspoken critics for retribution. Women will undoubtedly face restrictions, if not the total repression of the first Taliban regime.

Analysts say the Taliban movement is also fragmented and divided on key ideological questions, with their new policies and the type of social order they wish to create likely to be clearer in the coming days.

Even as some Taliban shared photos on social media of young girls with pink backpacks going to school, Afghan’s state television this week broadcast an eerie victory parade of masked Taliban fighters, including from its “martyrdom units”, displaying their car bombs, roadside explosive devices and suicide vests — the kind of weapons that have claimed thousands of lives in Afghanistan over the past two decades.

For now, though, many Kabul residents are relieved that their city has not turned into a battleground and that the Taliban appears more moderate than before. And as much as the Taliban’s sociocultural policies, the group’s ability to wrestle with a deepening economic crisis will greatly affect public perceptions in the days ahead.

 “There is a lot of change with the Taliban this time and that gives hope to the hopeless Afghan,” said Lal Agha, a retired police officer in his 60s. “We do not care who is the leader, we do not care which system is ruling. We want to have peace — and a piece of bread.”

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2021-09-03 10:59:29Z
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Breaking News: Terrorist who stabbed 6 people in New Zealand has been killed - Sky News

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2021-09-03 07:41:24Z
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Afghan refugees will get lessons in Britishness - Daily Mail

Afghan refugees will get lessons in Britishness: Migrants will learn English, British values and politics under new scheme

  • Ministers want to emulate schemes in countries such as France and Germany
  • In Europe refugees are giving 400-plus hours of language and culture lessons 
  • Robert Jenrick, communities secretary: 'We want to warmly welcome and support Afghan families'

Afghan refugees will be taught about British values, culture and civic duties to help them integrate into society, it was revealed today.

Ministers are said to want to emulate schemes in countries such as France and Germany where hours of language classes are given to newcomers.

A comprehensive programme would replace the existing patchwork of policies to teach English language skills and British values, Government sources told The Times, as well as the reversal of cuts to language classes.

The UK has evacuated more than 17,000 people from Afghanistan, including more than 5,000 Britons. 

Robert Jenrick, the communities secretary, said: 'We're looking at how can we have an enhanced level of English-language training, how can we ensure people will get into the workplace as quickly as possible and how can we comprehensively introduce people to British culture, civic and political life, increasing people's knowledge and understanding of the country and its values, so they can contribute fully to British life.'

He added: 'We want to warmly welcome and support Afghan families, particularly those who stood shoulder to shoulder with our armed forces, while being clear that the UK is a country with its own values and rules.'

Malalai Hussiny (wearing green headscarf), a refugee from Afghanistan who arrived on a evacuation flight at Heathrow Airport with her daughter will be among those helped to learn English and about British culture

Malalai Hussiny (wearing green headscarf), a refugee from Afghanistan who arrived on a evacuation flight at Heathrow Airport with her daughter will be among those helped to learn English and about British culture

Thousands of people are going to be resettled in Britain after the Taliban swept back into power after the withdrawal of western troops

Thousands of people are going to be resettled in Britain after the Taliban swept back into power after the withdrawal of western troops

Prince William 'personally stepped in to help Afghan officer he knew from Sandhurst to get himself and his family into Kabul airport and flee the Taliban to Britain' 

Prince William ensured the safe passage of a trapped Afghan soldier who he knew from Sandhurst to the UK after hearing of his plight.

The Duke of Cambridge, 39, decided to intervene after hearing that the officer, who he met during his training at the military academy in Berkshire, was trapped in Kabul with his family after the Taliban seized power earlier this month.

The royal's equerry naval officer Rob Dixon was able to contact personnel in the region and the former cadet, who is thought to have served in the Afghan national army, and his relatives were permitted to board a flight at Kabul airport to Britain. 

The duke's intervention comes as Britain and America officially ended their military presence in Afghanistan this week - leaving behind hundreds of citizens and Afghan allies desperate to flee the country.  

The officer in Afghanistan had previously worked closely with British troops and his role had left him and his family, which included women and children, in a vulnerable position within the country, The Daily Telegraph reports.

Following his rescue, former paratrooper Major Andrew Fox, said the duke's intervention was 'fully in line with what we get taught in the Army in terms of values'.

He told The Daily Telegraph: 'I myself got 2 Para to rush out into the crowd and grab someone for me.  

'It's fully in line with what we get taught in the Army in terms of values, loyalty, respect for others, all that good stuff. We're trained to help where we can.

'The situation was so chaotic and was so, frankly, mismanaged, that people would do whatever they could to get out.' 

In France, people settling in the country get 400 hours of free French-language lessons as well as civic training classes. Young migrants get free trips to museums and galleries. Germany offers 600 hours of 'civic orientation' lessons.

Thousands of Afghans who risked their lives to help British forces will be allowed to live and work indefinitely in the UK.

The Home Office has said the coveted status would be granted immediately – and automatically – to around 10,000 refugees.

It will allow them to work and enrol their children in school as they try to build a new life here. The decision fast-tracks a process that can take years and with only a limited right to remain.

Boris Johnson said the policy reflected the 'immense debt' owed to translators and others who had helped the UK military during the 20-year engagement.

A Whitehall source said that the package, codenamed Operation Warm Welcome, was 'the least we could do' following the chaotic and bloody withdrawal from Afghanistan.

Ministers are still however under pressure to do more to help hundreds, and possibly thousands, of Afghans now in hiding from Taliban reprisals for helping British troops. Its leaders have claimed they will not seek revenge but militants yesterday raided the homes of former translators in Kabul.

Former interpreters told the Mail they were living in fear for their lives after failing to secure a place among the 10,000 flown to Britain.

A 35-year-old who has qualified for relocation to the UK said: 'No one believes the Taliban's words of forgiveness. We helped the British kill and capture their men.

'We provided the intelligence to fight against them. We questioned their captured and injured – so it is simple that they will want revenge.'

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab yesterday denied reports that more than 7,000 Afghans with links to UK forces had been left behind, but was unable to provide another figure.

He said the number of British citizens left in Afghanistan was in 'the low hundreds', following the evacuation of more than 15,000 people in the second half of August.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said around 300 Afghans granted refuge in the UK had been left behind, along with 700 relatives.

Normally, asylum seekers are banned from working while their claims are assessed. They are entitled to minimal financial support if they would 'otherwise be destitute'.

Permission to work may be granted only if their claim has not been processed within a year through no fault of their own. If they are eventually granted leave to remain it is typically capped at five years.

The Prime Minister said that the decision by the US to remove its air cover for the Afghan army meant 'things did go faster' and allowed the Islanic extremists to catch the West on the hop.

The Prime Minister said that the decision by the US to remove its air cover for the Afghan army meant 'things did go faster' and allowed the Islanic extremists to catch the West on the hop.

The UK completed its withdrawal from Kabul at the weekend with the US mission coming to a close earlier this week

The UK completed its withdrawal from Kabul at the weekend with the US mission coming to a close earlier this week

By contrast, those who have served British forces will immediately be granted indefinite leave to remain, which brings with it the right to work and the option to apply for British citizenship.

Boris Johnson blames US decision to withdraw air power for speed of Taliban victory over Afghan forces as he admits it's been clear 'for many months' that Islamist takeover could happen quickly 

Boris Johnson has leveled blame for the swift Taliban victory in Afghanistan at the feet of Joe Biden and US forces.

The Prime Minister said that the decision by the US to remove its air cover for the Afghan army meant 'things did go faster' and allowed the Islamic extremists to catch the West on the hop.

He spoke as he visited soldiers from 16 Air Assault Brigade, which took part in the UK airlift from Kabul, at its base in Colchester, Essex. 

It came amid a furious cabinet row between Defence Secretary Ben Wallace and Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab about how much ministers were told about the possible collapse before it happened.

Mr Johnson said: 'It's been clear for many months that the situation could go very fast and that has been in part of the intelligence briefings. 

'There have also been suggestions, as you know, that the Afghan national defence force might hold on for longer.

'But logically you can see what happens: Once people in the Afghan Army felt they were no longer going to be getting the American air cover then the logic for them became really to end their resistance and so things did go faster.'

Mr Johnson's critique of the US came after Mr Wallace had earlier suggested that the abrupt abandonment of Afghanistan and thousands of allies left on the ground, meant America  was no longer a superpower.

Those eligible under the Afghanistan Relocations and Assistance Policy will also be eligible for immediate access to NHS services.

Councils have been offered a modest £5million to help with housing. Officials said they were working with more than 100 town halls and had so far found accommodation for more than 2,000 people.

Councils will be given an extra £12million to provide additional school places for Afghan children and further funding will be provided to create 300 university places.

Arrivals from Afghanistan will also be offered the Covid vaccine and given access to a portal where members of the public will be able to share offers of work and housing and make donations.

A Whitehall source last night told the Mail the package was 'likely' to be extended to 20,000 Afghans expected to come under a wider resettlement scheme – but this has not been decided.

In scenes likened to those described in the Bible, the exodus of refugees avoided Taliban checkpoints by heading to the desolate Nimruz region, before crossing into Pakistan near the border with Iran.

Many, with the help of people smugglers in Iran, are expected to head to Turkey where they can then plan routes to mainland Europe or Britain. Thousands of Afghans have already gathered at the main border crossings with Pakistan and Iran, despite the former insisting only those with visas or valid documents can enter.

Hundreds of thousands are believed to have crossed the Pakistan border at Spin Boldak. One Afghan said: 'Thousands were there. I saw women heavily pregnant, babies, old men. I remember the sound of crying babies echoing across the mountains.'

It came as Taliban fighters brazenly paraded some of the £62 billion worth of US military hardware they have seized. In Kandahar, their spiritual home, militia draped a convoy of £370,000 military vehicles in Taliban flags in scenes likely to further embarrass US President Joe Biden.

The parade even included a fly-past of a £5million Black Hawk chopper – complete with Taliban flag – just hours after a Pentagon spokesman dismissed the Taliban's capabilities, insisting: 'They can inspect all they want... they can't operate them.'

Boris Johnson insisted last night that it had been 'clear for many months' that the Taliban could seize power quickly in Afghanistan – just hours after Dominic Raab suggested the opposite.

The Foreign Secretary told reporters that no one in government could have predicted the speed of the Taliban's victory, adding that the intelligence claimed Kabul would not fall in August.

But visiting a military barracks in Essex, the Prime Minister said: 'I think it's been clear for many months that the situation could go very fast and that's been part of the intelligence briefing.'

His words appeared to support the position of Defence Secretary Ben Wallace, who said in an interview on Wednesday that he knew 'the game was up' in Afghanistan in July – a month before Kabul fell.

Mr Johnson added: 'There have also been suggestions that the Afghan national defence force might hold on for longer. But logically you can see what happened.

'Once the Afghan army felt that they were no longer going to be getting that American air cover, then I think the logic for them became really to end their resistance – and so things did go faster.'

The Prime Minister, who has been away with family in the West Country, made the comments during a visit to Merville Barracks in Colchester, where he met members of 16 Air Assault Brigade, who helped with the evacuation from Kabul.

The apparent barb came hours after Mr Raab reopened his public feud with the Defence Secretary over the handling of the crisis in Afghanistan.

The Foreign Secretary has faced criticism for taking a luxury holiday to Crete as the Taliban advanced on Kabul last month – despite his own department warning the situation could deteriorate quickly.

Dominic Raab arrived in Doha, Qatar, in the early hours of this morning as he stepped up efforts to help British allies left behind in Afghanistan

Dominic Raab arrived in Doha, Qatar, in the early hours of this morning as he stepped up efforts to help British allies left behind in Afghanistan

Mr Wallace's comments this week, made in an interview with The Spectator, appeared to pile further pressure on the beleaguered Foreign Secretary.

But, speaking on a visit to Qatar, Mr Raab rejected the Defence Secretary's assessment, suggesting that no one in Government could have predicted the speed of the Taliban victory.

UK's ex-ambassador to Afghanistan savages Foreign Office over diplomatic efforts

Britain's former representative in Kabul today warned the UK is 'playing catch up' on diplomatic efforts in the region around Afghanistan. 

Sir Nick Kay, the ex-UK ambassador to Afghanistan, said the diplomatic 'wheels' are now 'turning rapidly' following the Taliban takeover. 

But he suggested Britain had been slow off the mark in speaking to third countries as ministers and officials now scramble to help people escape Afghanistan following the withdrawal of US and UK forces.  

Sir Nick told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme: 'I think the important thing is now that the wheels are clearly turning and turning rapidly and it is good that the Foreign Secretary is out and engaging face to face with these countries in the region. 

'There isn't, obviously, any time to lose at all and to some extent we are, yes, playing catch up.' 

He told reporters: 'Ben and I were taking the same assessment throughout until very late.

'The central assessment had been that Kabul wouldn't fall until after the end of August, [after] the evacuation of allied troops.'

After talks in Qatar yesterday, Mr Raab said he was hopeful evacuations for the remaining UK citizens and Afghan allies could continue from Hamid Karzai airport 'in the near future'.

Mr Raab told MPs this week that the number of British citizens left in the country numbered in 'the low hundreds' after the RAF's last civilian airlift on Saturday.

He said he could not give an accurate estimate for the number of Afghans left with the right to come to the UK – but it is thought to total several thousand.

He also defended the decision to talk to the Taliban, saying the West had to 'adjust to the new reality' of the group being in power. But he added that the UK would not formally recognise the Taliban government.

The group yesterday called China their 'most important partner', claiming Beijing was 'ready to invest in and reconstruct' Afghanistan and will maintain its embassy in Kabul. Speaking during his visit, Mr Raab added he was using the trip to build a coalition which would 'exert the maximum moderating influence'.

He is expected to visit a number of Afghanistan's neighbours in the coming days – including Pakistan – to seek help in extracting remaining UK citizens. It came as the Government announced a £30million package, which will help neighbouring countries deal with an expected influx of refugees from Afghanistan.

However, Mr Raab has faced criticism for failing to engage with neighbouring countries earlier. Sir Nick Kay, former British ambassador to Afghanistan, said: 'We are playing catch up.'

And, according to an Ipsos-Mori poll, only 15 per cent of voters felt that Mr Raab had done a good job on Afghanistan. This was marginally better than US President Joe Biden – who scored a dismal 12 per cent – and was eight points lower than Mr Johnson.

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2021-09-03 06:25:42Z
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