Second Dutch minister resigns over Afghan evacuation crisis
The Dutch defence minister has became the
second cabinet member to resign over the Afghan evacuation debacle.
Ank Bijleveld resigned on Friday, following
the foreign minister, Sigrid Kaag, out of the door after parliament formally
censured them over a crisis that has left dozens of interpreters stranded in
Afghanistan.
The Dutch ministers are believed to be the
first western officials to resign over the chaos that followed the Taliban’s
takeover of Kabul, although Britain’s Dominic Raab was demoted as foreign
secretary earlier this week.
Unlike Kaag, who resigned on Thursday,
Bijleveld had originally refused to quit but finally bowed to pressure on
Friday, saying she did not want to hamper the “important work” of her
colleagues.
“My staying on has become the subject of discussion, and I don’t want
that responsibility,” she said in a hastily arranged press statement. “I
informed my party and prime minister that I will ask the king to receive my
resignation.”
The prime minister, Mark Rutte, said it was
“extremely regrettable” that Bijleveld was resigning but that he respected her
decision.
The Netherlands evacuated more than 1,500
people, including Dutch nationals and eligible Afghans, in the final chaotic
days before the US pulled out of Afghanistan on 31 August.
But many Afghans were left behind,
including 22 interpreters, according to the government, despite calls from MPs
and diplomats in Kabul to evacuate them months ago.
Kaag had defended her handling of the crisis
but admitted the government had some “blind spots” about the situation that the
Netherlands shared with other countries.
Dutch lawmakers from across the political
spectrum lined up during a debate on Tuesday to accuse Kaag, Bijleveld and the
government of being mired in “slowness and vagueness”.
The two resignations have been painted by
the Dutch government as showing accountability for the Afghan scandal,
something notable by its absence in other western governments.
Raab refused to resign despite being on
holiday on a Greek island as the UK government scrambled to evacuate British
nationals and Afghan staff in the face of Taliban advances last month.
The UK prime minister, Boris Johnson,
shunted Raab into the lesser role of justice secretary in a cabinet reshuffle
on Wednesday, though he retains the title of deputy prime minister.
Johnson will be hosting Rutte later on
Friday in Downing Street to discuss subjects including Afghanistan and defence.
Kaag had been scheduled to join them but will not now, officials said.
The immediate impact on Dutch politics is
expected to be limited, as the current cabinet is operating in a caretaker
capacity while coalition talks after elections in March drag on fruitlessly.
Both officials are expected to make a swift
comeback, especially Kaag, who is in negotiations with Rutte to form a
government after her centre-left D66 party won the second-most seats in the
elections.
But there is a chance the affair could
complicate the coalition talks, and even add to pressure on Rutte, who has been
dubbed the “Teflon prime minister” after dodging a number of other scandals.
Rutte himself formally resigned in January
over a scandal involving child benefits – only then to stay in office as
caretaker PM pending the elections, and then the coalition talks.
The debacle has also stirred bitter memories in the Netherlands of another foreign policy failure, when Dutch peacekeepers failed to prevent the 1995 Srebrenica massacre during the Bosnian war