Throngs push to escape Kabul as blame game for Afghan collapse begins
Desperation reigned at Kabul's
airport on Monday, a day after the Afghan capital was taken by Islamist Taliban
militants, as those hoping to flee the country crowded in and sought to get on
any flight that would take them.
According to witnesses and social
media transmissions, hundreds of people have been at the airport since Sunday,
sometimes jumping turnstiles and trying to force their way onto departing
aeroplanes. Some of those seeking to depart weren't even in possession of a
passport.
There have also been reports of
deaths at the airport and, earlier, of US forces firing warning shots as
they try to organize the evacuation of US personnel from the country the
US conquered in 2001. Additionally, there were reports of people falling
from departing planes, perhaps after having tried to hide in wheel wells.
There were reports of four such
cases on Monday, though they could not be verified.
Rumours circulated on Monday that
anyone who made it the airport would be taken out, though there was no
confirmation any such thing would happen. The German embassy warned on Twitter
that coming to the airport unsummoned could lead to dangerous situations.
Local media reported that the
airport has said that no more commercial flights are coming or going and urged
people not to come to the aircraft.
Kabul's collapse on Sunday
signalled the end of a 20-year-long nation-building exercise led by the
US with support of NATO allies.
The US kicked the Taliban
out of Kabul in 2001, because the Taliban had provided shelter to the al-Qaeda
operatives who planned and took part in hijacking the aeroplanes that were used
to bomb the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon outside
Washington on September 11 of that year.
But, despite billions of dollars
in investment and hundreds of thousands of soldiers, the US never managed
to create more than a weak state. Afghan politicians rarely cooperated with one
another and the armed forces were seen as weak.
Former US president Donald
Trump's administration agreed to withdraw in exchange for the Taliban
making peace with the Afghan government and the current president, Joe Biden,
stuck to the plan, but delayed the time table a few months.
However, as soon as foreign
troops began leaving, Taliban troops began their push. Afghan forces gave up
multiple key cities without a fight and Western forces are now trying to flee
the city weeks earlier than planned.
Many Afghan media outlets were
providing only limited service on Monday. Many were only showing repeats, instead
of live programming. Music channels have stopped and channels are opting
against programmes depicting women and anything else that has come under
criticism from ultra-conservative circles in the past.
During their reign, the Taliban
enforced a strict version of Islamic society, banning much entertainment,
stripping women of most rights and demanding piety of the population.
Rage was also starting to build
among those who feel let down by the collapse of Kabul.
Former US secretary of state
Mike Pompeo, who negotiated the original deal the Taliban, told Fox News that
the Biden administration seemed to have failed in its plans. He called for
US airpower to be brought in to crush the Taliban forces surrounding
Kabul.
"We shouldn’t be begging
them to spare the lives of Americans, we should be imposing costs on the
Taliban until they allow us to execute our plan in Afghanistan."
The current White House has been
fighting with Pompeo on the topic for months, claiming that the original
Trump-era deal left the US with few good options in Afghanistan, a charge
Pompeo has denied.
Meanwhile, rage in Afghanistan
was directed at Ashraf Ghani, the president who fled Kabul by helicopter on
Sunday. People described him on social media as a "filthy animal" for
his role in the capitulation, while others said it was the fault of his poor
leadership that they were now forced to burn books and music instruments in the
hopes the Taliban wouldn't find them.
There were also calls for calm
from abroad. China's Foreign Ministry noted it would "respect the will of
the people" and noted that a Taliban takeover would stop a war that has
lasted for decades.
Meanwhile, evacuations continued.
The Czech army reported landing a planeful of evacuees in Prague. The
Philippines also reported the start of its evacuation programme, with an
initial group of 32 people on their way home and another 19 ready to leave
soon.
But the efforts to leave the
country were also focusing attention on the fact that the situation could soon
turn into a refugee crisis that could affect Europe and other countries. An EU
videoconference on the matter was expected later on Monday after a group of
five Mediterranean countries raised the alarm after a summer that has already
seen a rise in refugee numbers.