Britain Says Its Final Civilian Flights Will Soon Leave Afghanistan

British defence minister Ben Wallace said the country was entering final hours of evacuation, would evacuate only people already inside Kabul airport.

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Britain said it may cooperate with Taliban to tackle threats from Islamic State. AFP
London:

British troops will end their evacuation of civilians from Afghanistan today and many hundreds of Afghans entitled to resettlement in Britain are likely to be left behind, armed forces chief General Nick Carter said.

British defence minister Ben Wallace said yesterday that the country was entering the final hours of its evacuation and would process only people who were already inside Kabul airport. "We have some civilian flights to take out, but it is very few now," Mr Carter told the BBC.

"We're reaching the end of the evacuation, which will take place during the course of today. And then it will be necessary to bring our troops out on the remaining aircraft," he said.

Britain's defence ministry said late yesterday that it had evacuated more than 14,500 Afghan and British nationals in the two weeks since the Taliban took control of the country.

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Mr Wallace said yesterday that he estimated between 800 and 1,100 Afghans who had worked with Britain and were eligible to leave the country would not make it through, and Mr Carter estimated the total would be in the "high hundreds". Many Afghans unable to leave judged it was too dangerous to travel to Kabul airport, Mr Carter said. "People like me... we are forever receiving messages and texts from our Afghan friends that are very distressing. We're living this in the most painful way," he added.

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Britain was a key ally of Washington from the start of a US-led invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 that toppled the then-ruling Taliban. Mr Carter, speaking to Sky News, said Britain and its allies might cooperate with the Taliban in future to tackle threats from the Islamic State terrorist group.

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The group, enemies of both Western countries and the Taliban, was responsible for a suicide bombing just outside Kabul airport on Thursday that killed scores of people, including 13 US service members. "If the Taliban are able to demonstrate that they can behave in the way that a normal government would behave in relation to a terrorist threat, we may well discover that we operate together," Mr Carter said. "But we've got to wait and see. Certainly some of the stories we get about the way that they (the Taliban) are treating their enemies would mean it would be quite difficult for us to work with them at the moment."

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Late yesterday, Britain said it would assist a private charter flight evacuating dogs and cats belonging to an animal rescue charity run by a British former soldier, Paul Farthing, whose plight attracted widespread public attention in Britain. Asked by the BBC if facilitating this was a distraction, Mr Carter said, "Our priority has obviously been to evacuate human beings."

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