Germany closes Kabul embassy, rushes evacuation of citizens

Germany closes Kabul embassy, rushes evacuation of citizens

Berlin is speeding up efforts, and two military planes are allegedly ordered to leave for Kabul today.

Passengers trying to fly out of Kabul International Airport wait in line at the check-in counter on Friday. (AP pic)
BERLIN:
Germany today shuttered its embassy in Kabul and sped up preparations to evacuate its citizens and local helpers as Taliban insurgents entered the Afghan capital.

“The security situation has deteriorated drastically. The German embassy Kabul is closed as of Aug 15,” the foreign office in Berlin said on its website.

According to diplomats, Foreign Minister Heiko Maas decided to move the embassy staff to the military part of Kabul airport where they are supposed to resume working.

At the same time, authorities in Berlin were speeding up efforts to evacuate German citizens as well as Afghans who used to work for the German military or other institutions.

Taliban insurgents entered Kabul today and said they expected to take power within days.

Maas convened the government’s crisis team to launch emergency measures to secure the departure of German staff and other people at risk, according to a diplomatic source.

A defence ministry spokesman did not confirm a report by tabloid Bild that two military planes were ordered to leave for Kabul later today.

Originally, several military evacuation flights were expected to depart on Monday, with the planes continuing to shuttle between Kabul and possibly the Uzbek capital Tashkent to fly out Germans and Afghans eligible for relocation to Germany.

Less than 100 Germans remain in Afghanistan beyond the government officials still working there, the foreign ministry in Berlin said on Friday.

It was still unclear how many local helpers would be flown out today.

A government source spoke of at least 1,000 former Afghan employees, including close family members, but added that this was only a rough estimate.

A support network founded by German troops put the number of those eligible for relocation under government rules at 2,000 people.

But the group, which goes by the name Patenschaftsnetzwerk Afghanische Ortskraefte (Sponsorship Network for Afghan Helpers), argues that another 4,000 Afghans should also be flown out, although they do not fulfill official requirements, as they were working as subcontractors, for example.

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