Senin, 30 Agustus 2021

PC Andrew Harper's widow redoubles efforts to make killing an emergency worker punishable with life - Sky News

A policeman's widow is increasing her pressure on politicians to make killing an emergency worker punishable with a mandatory life sentence, a  year after launching her campaign.

Lissie Harper was left bereaved when her husband, PC Andrew Harper, was caught in strapping attached to a car in August 2019 and dragged behind the vehicle.

It was PC Harper's last shift with Thames Valley Police before the newlyweds were due to go on their honeymoon.

Lissie Harper is redoubling her campaigning
Image: Lissie Harper is redoubling her campaigning

Since August last year, Mrs Harper has been working for the introduction of "Harper's Law", as she says emergency service workers need more protection.

The teenagers who killed her husband received jail terms ranging from 16 years to 13 years for their roles in his manslaughter in Berkshire - which left Mrs Harper "immensely disappointed".

An appeal by the Attorney General to increase their time behind bars was rejected.

Mrs Harper said: "Day after day, police officers, and sadly many of our emergency services heroes, look danger in the eyes and carry on regardless.

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"They put themselves in harm's way to protect the public, so we need to give something back to show we support them."

Mrs Harper has gained the support of both the Home Secretary, Priti Patel, and the Justice Secretary, Robert Buckland QC.

She has also been backed by a petition with more than 750,000 signatures.

Undated handout file photos issued by Thames Valley Police of (left to right), Henry Long, Jessie Cole and Albert Bowers. The Court of Appeal will rule on whether Pc Andrew Harper's killers' sentences for manslaughter are "unduly lenient" following a bid by the Attorney General to have them increased.
Image: From left to right, Henry Long, Jessie Cole and Albert Bowers. The trio were given sentences ranging from 13 years to 16 years

However, a proposal has yet to be brought before parliament.

The widow is hoping that the return of the House of Commons from recess, and the commencement of the party conferences, will buoy her efforts - as well as expected meetings with Ms Patel and Mr Buckland.

She said: "We have gained lots of momentum over the past year in discussions with the Ministry of Justice and The Home Office about making this much needed law a reality.

"With a year behind us since the commencement of such an emotional but all be it vital undertaking, I am reassured by the continued progress we make.

"I hope that with the government returning from recess, and as party conference season takes place, we will be in a good position to make Harper's Law a reality as soon as possible.

"We will continue to keep putting the pressure on politicians and continue to implore the Home Office to get this done now!"

She added: "Our protectors need our protection, to know that we appreciate everything they do for us, that running towards danger when everyone else runs away from it will not be met with injustice like it did for my husband.

PC Harper died after being dragged behind a car
Image: PC Harper died after being dragged behind a car

"We know this won't happen overnight, but make no mistake, I will not allow this to be kicked into the long grass.

"There will be no reprieve until Harper's Law is written in the history books."

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2021-08-31 01:20:29Z
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Pen Farthing tells of the horrors he saw in Kabul - Daily Mail

‘I couldn't let my dogs be shot’: Pen Farthing has split opinion over the rescue of his animals from Afghanistan but he reveals the truth about his battles with the MoD, his tears for the staff he's left behind and the horrors he saw in Kabul

  •  Pen Farthing passed through Taliban-controlled barbed wire into Kabul airport
  •  Sat for more than 24 hours in a hangar at airport waiting for a plane to fly him out
  •  Former British marine recalled the anguish and uncertainty of leaving Kabul

When former British marine Pen Farthing finally passed through the Taliban-controlled barbed wire gateway into Kabul airport with his 150 dogs and cats from his animal rescue charity four days ago, he received a sobering text.

'It was from my mate Dave who ran a security company in Kabul. He got out literally two hours before me, but kept his compound and left his two pet dogs with the staff.

'He texted, 'The bastards just shot Brutus. They went round the compound, saw the dogs, dragged them into the open and shot them'.'

Pen, 52, said he sat for more than 24 hours in a hangar at Kabul airport waiting for the plane which would take him on the first leg of his journey to the UK with the terrible image of the dogs being slaughtered 'playing on a loop all the time in my head'.

He recalls the anguish and uncertainty of leaving Kabul and is visibly pained when he talks about the fate of so many Afghans left behind.

Pen Farthing (pictured with wife Kaisa Markhus), who passed through the Taliban-controlled barbed wire gateway into Kabul airport with his 150 dogs and cats from his animal rescue charity four days ago, recalled the anguish and uncertainty of leaving the Afghan capital

Pen Farthing (pictured with wife Kaisa Markhus), who passed through the Taliban-controlled barbed wire gateway into Kabul airport with his 150 dogs and cats from his animal rescue charity four days ago, recalled the anguish and uncertainty of leaving the Afghan capital

'At the airport the British troops are on the inner side of the barbed wire,' he explained yesterday in his first full interview since leaving the UK for Norway to be reunited with his new wife, Kaisa, 30, who fled their home in Kabul two weeks ago. 

'You can talk to them but they can't do anything as the Taliban check people at gunpoint.

'The Afghan people were standing there with all their belongings in a line. There was one guy whose paperwork they didn't like so they're like, 'Come on, out', with an AK rifle in his back. I was just watching this guy trying to wave at his wife and kids as he was being dragged off at gunpoint...'

The despair is writ large across his face and his eyes are dulled by all he has seen.

'Where they took him I do not know,' he continues. 'I think I've cried more in the last five or six days than I have since I was four years old. I'm just numb with it.

'I think it'll take a long time to ever get out of my head having to say goodbye to the two members of staff who drove the truck for me to get me into the airport along roads just lined with people. There were thousands and thousands of them in makeshift camps waiting for their turn to try to get into the airport – women, children...

'And you should have seen the human misery in that hangar – the possessions people had left behind – photographs, hats, children's toys. 

'I was sitting amongst all that when someone tweeted about my foul-mouthed rant [to Defence Minister Ben Wallace's special advisor Peter Quentin].'

The furious answer machine message which was leaked to the media at the weekend has dominated news coverage as the astonishing, toxic battle between this extraordinary man and the Ministry of Defence has raged on as, quite literally, Kabul has burnt.

'I don't even remember making it,' says Pen. 'I totally forgot about it until somebody sent me a tweet that said, 'Pen Farthing's explosive rant…' I thought, 'What the hell are they going on about?'

Mr Farthing flew back to the UK last night with his menagerie of animals rescued by the Nowzad charity

Mr Farthing flew back to the UK last night with his menagerie of animals rescued by the Nowzad charity

The rescued dogs start their quarantine
The rescued dogs start their quarantine

The rescued dogs (left and right) have begun their quarantine at a sanctuary in Britain 

'It was a heat-of-the-moment thing. We needed paperwork for our staff and their families to be able to go to the airport.

'Peter Quentin had told me six days before the staff had been approved to leave the country but, for whatever reason, they wouldn't give me the paperwork.

'You can imagine as the window between where we were and when the Americans were pulling out got smaller and smaller I was getting pretty stressed. 

'Quentin was the only person I had a phone number for. I guess that's why he got both barrels. As far as the person who decided to release that voicemail is concerned, if that's their priority in life let them crack on.

'I've apologised for the language I used but that's it.

'I'm not worried about what some politician is saying about me. That's not on my radar. What's on my radar is that this ill-thought out withdrawal has destroyed a country overnight and cost countless lives.'

Pen may well be apologetic for his language and loss of self-control but not for the efforts he made to save the staff who, to him, were like a family. As it was, it took six days for the paperwork to be completed.

They immediately crated up the cats and dogs, put wives and children on a bus and headed in a convoy to the airport. It was a mission that few thought he'd pull off in a city that was falling apart as the Taliban roamed the streets with Kalashnikov assault rifles.

But Pen, who left the Royal Marines in 2009, has the commando spirit writ through him –and a marine never gives up. Miraculously, he negotiated passage for two truckloads of crated animals and a busload of Afghans through two Taliban checkpoints to the commander at the South Gate – only to be barred from entering.

Hounds safe and sound

Animal worker cradles one of the dogs after it arrives in Wales

Animal worker cradles one of the dogs after it arrives in Wales

Cradling the tiny ball of fluff in his arms, an animal charity worker gazes tenderly at his new charge.

The animals that have arrived at Wales Ape and Monkey Sanctuary in Powys, are just some of the near-100 dogs and 70 cats rescued from Kabul by Pen Farthing that have begun quarantine at sanctuaries across the UK.

They will be looked after until they can go to adoptive families.

Lozzas Lurcher Rescue in Hertfordshire said their 'precious cargo' had been 'well looked after' by Mr Farthing.

US President Joe Biden had changed the rules just three hours earlier only allowing those through with passports and visas to control the growing numbers inside the airport.

'We were inside, all of us inside with the right paperwork, but we were three hours too late. Biden had changed the rules.' 

He shakes his head. Three bloody hours – if they'd pulled their finger out and got the paperwork to us just a day before my staff would have been out with me.' 

I meet Pen with his wife on a gloriously sunny day in the grounds of a quarantine hotel in Oslo where he has to spend three days having been in a red list country. Kaisa has been in Oslo since she left Kabul on a Norwegian mercy flight 12 days ago.

As the spouse of a Norwegian, Pen is allowed to leave the hotel after three days if he tests negative for Covid. He can then finish his ten-day quarantine period with Kaisa in her family's home. He is also allowed visitors but contact is not permitted.

You can see it's taking every ounce of self-control not to give his wife of less than five months a jolly good hug. He came here after helping to offload the animals at Heathrow with staff from the airport's Animal Reception Centre. 

Five cats sadly died on the journey and one of the dogs was stabbed when, Pen believes, they drove through Taliban checkpoints to Kabul airport. 

Otherwise the animals, albeit frightened, are healthy and will soon be released from quarantine, despite briefings from Whitehall sources that they are riddled with disease and may have to be put down. 

Whoever's saying that is talking a crock of crap,' says Pen, once again not mincing his words. 'One of the things we pride ourselves on at Nowzad [his animal shelter in Kabul] is every single animal is fully vaccinated for rabies, parvovirus, distemper, kennel cough, they're treated for fleas and ticks and dewormed.

'They're all neutered and spayed and the blood samples are sent to DEFRA to prove they've got the relevant antibodies for rabies.'

'My five dogs are ready for me to collect as soon as I'm out of here.'

Kaisa, listens to Pen talk. She is happy just to be able to sit with the man she feared she would never see again after that failed first attempt to make it to the airport. Pen's happiness is fleeting. 

He remains haunted by the staff he has been forced to leave behind, and will not rest until he has brought them to safety. 'It was the staff who made the decision for me to make a second attempt on my own,' he says. 

'They said, 'Don't stay. You've got to take the dogs out. The Taliban will just shoot them'.

'I gave them three months wages – that's put away securely – and a couple of hundred dollars extra. I said, 'Put this in your pocket. Do not spend it. I want it back when I see you in England. That's you're emergency money'.Then I went round and hugged every single one of them, including the girls. Everybody was so emotional.'

Pen's eyes are red. He says he slept for little more than four hours in the five days before he put his head on the pillow in his quarantine hotel last night. Kaisa had to call him 13 times to wake him up yesterday morning. 

Mr Farthing confirmed he had landed in Heathrow this morning in a message on Twitter

Mr Farthing confirmed he had landed in Heathrow this morning in a message on Twitter

'I had no idea if we were going to get in to the airport. I've never been as nervous in my life going back to that airport. 

'People were telling me there was another bomb threat [a suicide bomber had killed at least 170 people when they made their first attempt] and a rocket threat. Pen waited for more than 24 hours for his plane to get diplomatic clearance to leave. As he sat in the hangar, an Army officer approached him to give him a piece of his mind about 'wasting army resources'.

'He had a right go,' says Pen.

 'Once he'd finished I said, 'Right let's put some facts on the table here'. I explained to him 'It's a cargo plane. The dogs and cats are going in the hold where you can't put people. I haven't used any military resources. I didn't put any of you guys in danger getting in because the soldiers were stood on the barbed wired where they've always stood.

'They didn't come forward to facilitate my entry into the airport. When I left where they were stood they were dealing with the next group of Afghans coming in via the Taliban'. So this Army guy is like, 'Oh s**t, sorry mate'.' 

'In the end it wasn't even the British who loaded the cargo. They'd gone. That's how close to the wire my flight coming in was.' When Pen's plane finally took off on Saturday night, he saw the city lights laid out beneath him. 'There was no joy just guilt,' says Pen. 

'Guilt I couldn't get [my staff] out. Guilt that for whatever reason I couldn't persuade the powers-that-be to give me that paperwork a few days earlier. Guilt because I left them behind.

'I had Ewok [his dog] on my lap. When I first came back to Afghanistan, I came because of my love of dogs but, in the years I spent there, it's the people I grew to love.

'Now we've put them back into the dark ages. My young female vets – one was the face of the new Afghanistan – were having to come to work in Burkas by the time I left. 

'People can say what they like about this mission, but they weren't there. They weren't on the ground when I lost two young marines in 2006 to make sure the Taliban weren't in power. Now we've just given the whole country back. I'm not giving the people I regard as my family back with it.

'All this s**t about putting animals before people – I have never said my dogs were a priority before people. I have never said I'm a priority. 

'Caring about animals doesn't mean not caring about people, I don't understand where all this is coming from. It's the people that haunt me.

'I can still see two of my young female vets sat there crying when we got back to Nowzad after the first failed attempt to the airport. That's what will never stop playing like a loop in my mind until I get them out.'

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2021-08-30 21:10:09Z
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Nicola Sturgeon announces roles for Patrick Harvie and Lorna Slater after Scottish Greens agreement - Daily Record

Scottish Green co-leaders Patrick Harvie and Lorna Slater have been given their new roles in Nicola Sturgeon's government after a power-sharing deal was signed.

Green Party members agreed on Saturday to go into government with the SNP following the Holyrood election in May.

The First Minister has announced that Harvie will be the Minister for Zero Carbon Buildings, Active Travel and Tenants’ Rights, while Slater will be the Minister for Green Skills, Circular Economy and Biodiversity.

Harvie will work with the Housing Secretary (Shona Robison) and the Net Zero Secretary (Michael Matheson).

Slater will work alongside the Finance and Economy Secretary (Kate Forbes) and Matheson.

Both MSPs will be ratified during a session of the Scottish Parliament tomorrow when members return following their summer recess.

Harvie’s responsibilities will include driving policy changes that shift Scotland away from reliance on high carbon modes of transport and heating and towards greener alternatives – essential as part of the push towards a net zero economy by 2045.

The Glasgow MSP will lead on delivering a new deal for tenants, and ensuring building standards are fit for purpose.

While, Slater will drive a Green Industrial Strategy, helping people access training and opportunities as part of a net zero Scotland, and ensuring our economy is supported through a just transition to net zero.

The First Minister said: "This historic cooperation agreement is founded in a shared drive to work together in the Scottish Government to build a greener, fairer, independent Scotland.

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“We have massive challenges to overcome: a global pandemic and its lasting effects, the climate emergency and the assault by the UK government on the powers of our Parliament.

"Patrick and Lorna’s roles in Government are rightly at the heart of facing up to them, and the expertise and passion they bring with them will contribute greatly to defining Scotland’s path forward in doing so.

“Although our parties do not agree on everything we have been able to compromise on both sides, find common ground and agree on areas where we can work together to build a better country.

“The world has had to adapt quickly to respond to the fast-paced and changing nature of the pandemic but what it has shown us is that we can put politics aside to tackle the challenges in front of us decisively and in a way that delivers. I look forward to working with my new Green Party colleagues in this new and ambitious way."

Patrick Harvie said: "We are at a crucial tipping point in terms of our relationship with the planet. I am thrilled at the opportunity to drive forward policies that enhance peoples’ lives while supporting the urgent goal of tackling the climate emergency as we emerge from the pandemic.”

Lorna Slater said: "Any transition to net zero must be just, and my focus will be on delivering policies that support our workforce and wider economy through that change as well as ensuring our greener future is also a prosperous and fair one that benefits our natural environment.”

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2021-08-30 15:22:53Z
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Afghanistan: Pen Farthing apologises for 'incredibly embarrassing language' used in voicemail to government aide during animal rescue attempt - Sky News

The former Royal Marine who founded an animal shelter in Afghanistan has apologised for the "incredibly embarrassing" language he used in a voicemail to a government aide as he tried to leave the country.

Paul "Pen" Farthing arrived at London Heathrow on a privately-funded charter flight from Kabul at around 7.30am on Sunday - with about 170 dogs and cats on board.

His Operation Ark campaign to evacuate the rescue animals and staff at his charity Nowzad has been widely covered in the media in the days since the Taliban took back control of Afghanistan.

Members of the government have criticised the animal rescuer for "diverting" efforts to evacuate all British nationals and eligible Afghans before the US-imposed deadline.

Following a number of outbursts on social media, Mr Farthing was recorded shouting at Peter Quentin, who works as a special adviser to Defence Secretary Ben Wallace, in a voice message.

The recording, which was obtained by The Times, accuses the minister and his aide of "blocking" his evacuation flight.

On Monday, Mr Farthing apologised for his "colourful language".

More on Afghanistan

Paul 'Pen' Farthing. Pic: Nowzad
Image: Mr Farthing touched down at Heathrow on Sunday. Pic: Nowzad

He told ITV's Good Morning Britain: "I'm incredibly embarrassed about my language, I do apologise to everybody who's listened to that.

"I was at the lowest point I could possibly be. I understand how the world works but emotions got the better of me, so for all those who had to listen to that I do apologise for my language.

"I should not have said it like that, but the sentiment, yes, I was just incredibly upset, angry, frustrated, it was the lowest point. I had no other option, I didn't know what else to do."

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Mr Farthing announced his arrival back in the UK on Sunday morning, adding that he was unable to bring back the 24 charity workers and dependants he had wanted to.

Dominic Dyer, a friend and animal welfare campaigner, said the former British soldier was forced to travel back from Kabul alone after being told it was not possible to find people to fill the plane's seats.

He said the shelter staff were "still in their homes" and that efforts would be made to try to get them out of Afghanistan.

Mr Farthing said he had "mixed emotions" as he touched back down in the UK.

Pen Farthing. Pic: Nowzad
Image: He has returned to the UK with about 170 cats and dogs. Pic: Nowzad

"Arrived Heathrow with partial success of #OpArk," he tweeted.

"Mixed emotions and true deep feeling of sadness for Afghan today."

Mr Farthing said his team made it inside the airport perimeter on Friday after the suicide bomb attack that killed more than 90 people in Kabul on Thursday.

But he said he was turned away after US President Joe Biden had changed paperwork rules two hours earlier.

Mr Dyer said an appeal was made to the UK government "to see if we could fill seats with refugees within the airport", but the response was that "there was no one they could find".

The former Royal Marine, originally from Dovercourt in Essex, set up the Nowzad animal shelter in Kabul after serving in Afghanistan in the mid-2000s.

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2021-08-30 09:53:35Z
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Britain has NO IDEA how many Afghans it left behind in Kabul - Daily Mail

Britain has NO IDEA how many Afghans it left behind in Kabul and is 'sceptical' about the Taliban's promise to let them out and refrain from revenge assassinations, says Foreign Office Minister James Cleverly

  • UK completed its exit from Afghanistan on Saturday as final flights left Kabul
  • Thousands of Afghan citizens who worked for UK forces were airlifted to Britain
  • But ministers have now said it is 'impossible' to say how many were left behind 
  • UK 'sceptical' of Taliban assurances people will be given safe passage to leave 

Ministers today admitted they have no idea how many Afghan citizens the UK left behind in Afghanistan after Britain completed its withdrawal from the country. 

The UK airlifted thousands of people out of Kabul but the Government has conceded that it was not able to rescue everyone who is eligible to come to Britain. 

And there are claims that at least 5,000 people with a right to settle in the UK may be still in Afghanistan, but some fear the true number is much higher, including hundreds of interpreters who aided British troops over the past two decades. 

James Cleverly, the Foreign Office Minister, said this morning that it is 'impossible' to put a number on how many people failed to make it out after the Taliban took power. 

The group has given the international community assurances that eligible people will be able to leave the country and will be granted safe passage. 

But Mr Cleverly said Britain is 'sceptical' of those assurances and the UK will 'judge the Taliban by their actions' amid fears of reprisals against people who helped Western forces during the conflict.

Mr Cleverly also insisted the UK is a 'long way' from offering diplomatic recognition to the new Taliban regime.    

James Cleverly, the Foreign Office Minister, said this morning that it is 'impossible' to put a number on how many people failed to make it out after the Taliban took power

James Cleverly, the Foreign Office Minister, said this morning that it is 'impossible' to put a number on how many people failed to make it out after the Taliban took power

The UK completed its withdrawal from Afghanistan at the weekend, with the US due to complete its exit by August 31

The UK completed its withdrawal from Afghanistan at the weekend, with the US due to complete its exit by August 31

Approximately 15,000 people were evacuated from Afghanistan by UK troops over the course of nearly two weeks in Operation Pitting. 

A joint statement from more than 90 countries, including the UK and the US, was published last night stating that the Taliban had made promises on allowing more people to leave the country. 

The statement said: 'We have received assurances from the Taliban that all foreign nationals and any Afghan citizen with travel authorization from our countries will be allowed to proceed in a safe and orderly manner to points of departure and travel outside the country.'  

However, many senior figures in the West fear the Taliban will fail to live up to the pledge amid concerns the number of Afghans left behind who may be eligible for resettling is actually far higher than initial Government estimates.  

Asked how many people were left behind, Mr Cleverly told Sky News: ‘Well, that’s an impossible number to put a figure on. We had three methods by which, or vehicles by which, people could leave Afghanistan.

‘Obviously British nationals, we have a much better idea of how many British nationals were in Afghanistan. The vast, vast bulk of British nationals have now left Afghanistan.

‘The Arap scheme, those Afghans, interpreters and others, who had worked directly for us and with us, have their scheme.

‘But also we extended to Afghans who were at risk of reprisals and there was no set number of people in that third group.’

Mr Cleverly said the Government is 'sceptical' about the commitments made by the Taliban. 

‘Well, we have always said, I think the Prime Minister has said very recently, that we will judge the Taliban by their actions,' he said. 

‘They have made certain commitments about not taking out reprisals on individuals, about facilitating exit.

‘Obviously we are sceptical about those commitments but we will continue working with them to an extent, based on their conduct, to try and facilitate that further evacuation and repatriation effort.’

Mr Cleverly did not deny reports that hundreds of emails sent to the Foreign Office from people trying to get out of the country had been left unopened. 

He said: ‘Well, you have got to remember that when we extended our evacuation efforts to Afghan nationals we of course received a flood of requests and those were worked through and they will continue to be worked through.

‘But I know my own inbox had a huge number of emails came through, some duplicates, and of course we focused on the people who were at the airport who were being processed and who we felt that we could get out through Kabul airport whilst we still had security of Kabul airport.

‘We will of course continue to work through applications from people who have contacted us, people who are still trying to get out of Afghanistan.’  

Members of the British armed forces 16 Air Assault Brigade walk to the air terminal after disembarking a Royal Air Force Voyager at RAF Brize Norton, west of London on August 29

Members of the British armed forces 16 Air Assault Brigade walk to the air terminal after disembarking a Royal Air Force Voyager at RAF Brize Norton, west of London on August 29

The return of the Taliban to power in Afghanistan has prompted fears that the country will once again become a breeding ground for terrorism. 

Asked if the UK is now less safe than it was a month ago, Mr Cleverly said: 'Sadly we saw the attack at Kabul airport, we saw members of the American military, Afghan citizens and sadly of course British nationals killed in that attack.

‘We will work tirelessly to protect the safety of British people, both home and abroad, that is what we do.

‘Ensuring that the Taliban stick to their commitments in terms of maintaining the internal security within Afghanistan is important and of course we will have to keep a very, very close eye on what happens in Afghanistan to make sure it doesn’t descend back into a haven for terrorism which the Taliban have said they are committed to preventing and we will seek to hold them to that.’ 

Mr Cleverly said that the Taliban 'want to be treated like a legitimate government' but 'there’s a long way to go before we might consider that'. 

The UK is now focusing on how to engage with the group after Britain pulled its final troops and diplomatic staff out of Afghanistan on Saturday.  

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is due to host a virtual meeting with key allies including Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab this afternoon. 

Meanwhile, the UK’s UN ambassador Dame Barbara Woodward will discuss the situation with her counterparts from the four other permanent member countries of the UN Security Council - China, France, Russia, and the US.  

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2021-08-30 07:59:10Z
52781848575823

Pen Farthing claims Britain DIDN'T help him into Kabul airport - despite the MoD saying it did - Daily Mail

Pen Farthing claims British government DIDN'T help him and his animals get into Kabul airport - despite the MoD saying it did - as veterans' fury grows at his pet rescue 'pantomime'

  • Pen Farthing claims Britain didn't help him into Kabul airport, despite MoD announcement saying they did 
  • Military veterans have taken aim at the ex-Royal Marine for staging a 'pantomime' in Afghanistan
  • Mr Farthing  landed in Heathrow with around 200 dogs and cats from the Nowzad animal shelter he founded
  • He had denounced the Government for refusing to help get his animals out of Kabul amid the chaos
  • Speaking to Good Morning Britain from Oslo, he admitted some seats on his animal rescue flight were empty
  • Mr Farthing apologised after MoS revealed he threatened to 'f**king destroy' MoD adviser unless he helped

Pen Farthing has claimed the Government didn't help him into Kabul airport despite the Ministry of Defence announcing it had helped him and his animals through the system, as military veterans take aim at the ex-Royal Marine's rescue 'pantomime'.   

The former soldier landed in Heathrow with around 200 dogs and cats from the Nowzad shelter he founded in Afghanistan after denouncing London for refusing to help get his animals out. He then took a connecting flight to Norway to see his wife Kaisa Markhus. 

Ministers including Defence Secretary Ben Wallace have expressed frustration at Mr Farthing's tactics after the Mail on Sunday revealed he threatened to 'f**king destroy'  Peter Quentin, a special adviser accused of 'blocking' the flight, unless he helped. 

Mr Wallace initially said that he would not prioritise 'pets over people' but later allowed a charter plane to land at Kabul to pick up Mr Farthing, and 'facilitated' the charity's entry to the airport. The Defence Secretary has denied allegations he 'blocked' the charter flight.

But speaking to ITV's Good Morning Britain from Oslo today, Mr Farthing dismissed claims he was helped by the Government to get into Kabul airport. 'Nobody in the British Government facilitated my entry into that airport - I did that with the Taliban,' he said.

'I came up to the British checkpoint, that was the first time - and this is well into the airport, the Taliban and British are stood there, there's some barbed wire separating them - that was the first time I spoke to any British people.

'So whoever is making any accusations or any comments needs to actually have been stood there on the ground to see how I got into that airport. Nobody facilitated my entry... any interpreters or anybody else, there was me and the truck full of dogs and cats, which went into a cargo hold where you cannot put people.' 

He also admitted that some seats on his animal rescue flight were empty and that five of his cats died of shock on their way to Hamid Karzai airport.   

Now, veterans are turning their fire on Mr Farthing. Major Andrew Fox, an ex-paratrooper who served three tours in Afghanistan, told The Times: 'The Taliban's agenda is not about killing animals or westerners who cared for them. It's about killing those who worked with NATO. It's insane they were facilitated into the airport with British citizens and interpreters left outside.' 

Major James Bolter, a reservist in the Royal Logistic Corps, said the 'pantomime' surrounding the issue had distracted people on the ground from the task at hand. 

He told the paper: 'Was this for worthy Afghan politicians or special forces? No, sadly and infuriatingly, this was to bring one ex-Royal Marine and his rescued cats and dogs to the UK. What do I tell those people left behind when they ask me why the UK put more effort into rescuing abandoned animals than them? I have no answers. I am torn between anger and despair.'  

Forme Royal Marine Commando Pen Farthing
Major Andrew Fox, an ex-paratrooper who served three tours in Afghanistan and has been helping to evacuate trapped interpreters

Major Andrew Fox, an ex-paratrooper who served three tours in Afghanistan and has been helping to evacuate trapped interpreters, took aim at Pen Farthing's animal rescue out of Kabul

Mr Farthing landed in Heathrow with around 200 dogs and cats from the Nowzad animal shelter he founded in Kabul after denouncing the Government for refusing to help get his menagerie out

Mr Farthing landed in Heathrow with around 200 dogs and cats from the Nowzad animal shelter he founded in Kabul after denouncing the Government for refusing to help get his menagerie out

The ex-Commando then took a connecting flight to Oslo to see his wife Kaisa Markhus

The ex-Commando then took a connecting flight to Oslo to see his wife Kaisa Markhus

Rockets are fired at Kabul airport as US troops race to evacuate: Attack follows American drone strike on ISIS-K that killed three children and other civilians after setting off jihadists' explosives 

Multiple rockets have been fired at Kabul airport today in just the latest attack as the US races to get its last troops out of Afghanistan before the August 31 deadline set by Joe Biden.

At least five missiles were fired, an American official told journalists, some of which fell short into the city while others were brought down by defence systems. There were no initial reports of US casualties but that information might change, the official added.

Afghan media said the rockets had been launched from the back of a truck and struck multiple parts of the city. No group has yet claimed responsibility, but it comes amid attacks by the ISIS-K terror group.

On Sunday, and American drone blew up what was believed to be a group of ISIS-K suicide bombers planning an attack on the airport, killing three children in the process.

Several civilians were also injured when a missile fired from a Reaper drone struck two cars parked to the north of Hamid Karzai airport, triggering a secondary explosion which led to the civilian casualties.

The death toll is expected to rise with Afghan TV reporting that as many as nine people died in the blast including six children, an interpreter who worked with US troops, and an Afghan army officer due to get married tomorrow.

The Taliban - which is now in control of Afghanistan and is enemies with ISIS-K - said it welcomed the US strike. 

Foreign Office Minister James Cleverly insisted the Government had prioritised the evacuation of people over pets. He told LBC Radio: 'We have always prioritised evacuating people over evacuating animals.

'Mr Farthing is a British national, he had the opportunity to leave Afghanistan much earlier. His staff are enrolled on to the scheme by which Afghans that worked with the British were able to be evacuated.

'But as I have said, we have always prioritised the evacuation of people.'

Appearing on ITV's Good Morning Britain today, Mr Farthing said emotions 'got the better' of him during the expletive-laden message and apologised. A recording, obtained by The Times, captured Mr Farthing berating Peter Quentin, a special adviser to Mr Wallace, who he accused of 'blocking' efforts to arrange the evacuation flight. 

The Defence Secretary has insisted on Twitter that it is a 'total myth' that he blocked a flight. 

'I'm incredibly embarrassed about my language, I do apologise to everybody who's listened to that. I was at the lowest point I could possibly be. I understand how the world works but emotions got the better of me, so for all those who had to listen to that I do apologise for my language,' he told GMB.

'I should not have said it like that, but the sentiment, yes, I was just incredibly upset, angry, frustrated, it was the lowest point. I had no other option, I didn't know what else to do. So that's why you've probably heard some colourful language.'

He also told the show that there were 'several empty seats' on his evacuation flight with around 170 dogs and cats from the animal shelter and insisted he was the only person on the flight. 

He added: 'I went around and they reassured me that they had enough capacity for all the people that needed to leave. I was probably like the last person to enter that airport - it was closed. Americans, the British, had obviously stopped taking people in because there had to be a point where they stopped taking people in.

'So they assured me they had enough capacity for everybody who was inside the airport.' 

Mr Farthing flew back to the UK last night with his menagerie of animals rescued by the Nowzad charity, as audio of a foul-mouthed rant was leaked to the media. The 57-year-old's chartered jet from Pakistan landed in Kabul at around 6pm local time and stopped off in Muscat before making its journey to Heathrow Airport. He then took a connecting flight to Norway. 

Mr Farthing's friend said the ex-Marine had succeeded in evacuating the 170 animals to the UK but 24 staff had to be left behind. Dominic Dyer, an animal welfare campaigner, said the former marine was forced to travel back alone after being told it was not possible to find people to fill the plane's seats.

Mr Dyer said the shelter staff were 'still in their homes' with the charity in contact with them, adding that efforts would be made to try to get them out of Afghanistan. 

'They are one of thousands of Afghans... that have a right to leave the country but actually have no safe passage out at the moment,' he said.

The activist said the staff were denied entry to the airport in Kabul on Thursday, with the Taliban claiming they did not have the right paperwork. 'Tragic and not the ending we wanted, but we fell victim to the chaos and the difficulties of getting through those gates,' he added.

All of the almost 100 dogs and 70 cats on the flight were 'healthy', with the dogs placed in kennels, Mr Dyer said. He said armed forces personnel 'willingly and voluntarily' helped Mr Farthing load the animals' crates on to the aircraft in Kabul, but extra passengers were not found.

Appearing on ITV's Good Morning Britain today, Mr Farthing said emotions 'got the better' of him during the expletive-laden message and apologised. A recording, obtained by The Times, captured Mr Farthing berating Peter Quentin, a special adviser to Mr Ben Wallace, who he accused of 'blocking' efforts to arrange the evacuation flight

Appearing on ITV's Good Morning Britain today, Mr Farthing said emotions 'got the better' of him during the expletive-laden message and apologised. A recording, obtained by The Times, captured Mr Farthing berating Peter Quentin, a special adviser to Mr Ben Wallace, who he accused of 'blocking' efforts to arrange the evacuation flight

Mr Farthing confirmed he had landed in Heathrow. It has reported he took a connecting flight to Oslo to be with his wife

Mr Farthing confirmed he had landed in Heathrow. It has reported he took a connecting flight to Oslo to be with his wife 

Pen Farthing flew back to the UK with his menagerie of animals rescued by the Nowzad charity

Pen Farthing flew back to the UK with his menagerie of animals rescued by the Nowzad charity

Mr Fathing's staff and 179 cats and dogs, near the airport in Kabul as they attempted to flee the country

Mr Fathing's staff and 179 cats and dogs, near the airport in Kabul as they attempted to flee the country 

Mr Dyer claimed an appeal was put in to the British Government 'to see if we could fill seats with refugees within the airport. They told us there was no one they could find that could actually fill that aircraft.'      

Mr Farthing's controversial publicity campaign to pressure the British Government to get his staff and animals out of the Afghan capital following the Taliban coup gained huge public support and helped the ex-Royal Marine to raise enough money to charter a private plane. 

But it has also led to accusations that the ex-Commando took up resources that could have been used to evacuate more people from Kabul. It was revealed yesterday that up to 150 British nationals and 1,100 Afghans who assisted UK efforts in Afghanistan will be left behind in the country. 

Kaisa Markhus, who fled Afghanistan last week for her native Norway, was eating dinner with her father in Oslo when Pen video-called her from inside Kabul airport

Kaisa Markhus, who fled Afghanistan last week for her native Norway, was eating dinner with her father in Oslo when Pen video-called her from inside Kabul airport

Ex-soldier Tom Tugendhat, the Tory chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee, criticised the decision to use British troops to evacuate 180 cats and dogs while Afghan ex-UK staff are left fearing reprisals under Taliban rule. 

'The difficulty is getting people into and out of the airport and we've just used a lot of troops to get in 200 dogs,' Mr Tugendhat said. 'Meanwhile my interpreter's family are likely to be killed. As one interpreter asked me a few days ago, why is my five year-old worth less than your dog?'

When asked what his answer was to his interpreter's question, Mr Tugendhat replied: 'I didn't have an answer, what would your answer be?' 

Major General Nick Carter, the head of the British Army, told the BBC's Radio 4 Today Programme that the army's 'priority has been to evacuate human beings,' amid anger over the decision to evacuate animals. 

'We obviously worry about everything that needs to be evacuated, but of course these are very difficult times, and there are very difficult judgements to be made,' he said.  

Earlier Mr Farthing revealed how 'depressing' it was that he was forced to leave his Afghan staff behind. He told how his employees were stopped from crossing the Taliban line to the British area at Kabul airport.

His desperate comments were in sharp contrast to his wife, who spoke of her joy that her husband was on his way home. Kaisa Markhus, who fled Afghanistan last week for her native Norway, was eating dinner with her father in Oslo when she was told he was getting out.

It comes as the US military said it used a drone strike to kill a member of the so-called Islamic State group's Afghanistan affiliate.

The strike came amid what the White House called indications that ISIS-K planned to strike again as the US-led evacuation from Kabul airport moves into its final days. A devastating suicide bombing claimed by the group killed as many as 170 Afghans and 13 American service members at the airport on Thursday.

Mr Farthing flew out of Afghanistan for Tashkent in Uzbekistan with 94 dogs and 79 cats on a private jet and will later return to Britain. But the day was marked with sadness as he was forced to leave behind his workforce to the Taliban.

He told the Sun: 'It is just so depressing I had to leave them behind. Some of them came with me to the airport but they weren't allowed to cross the line from Taliban to British control. 

Tom Tugendhat (pictured August 18 in the House of Commons) criticised the decision to use soldiers to evacuate Mr Farthing's animals while the lives of Afghans who assisted the British during the 20-year occupation of the country are under threat - including his own interpreter

Tom Tugendhat (pictured August 18 in the House of Commons) criticised the decision to use soldiers to evacuate Mr Farthing's animals while the lives of Afghans who assisted the British during the 20-year occupation of the country are under threat - including his own interpreter

It comes as the US military said it used a drone strike to kill a member of the so-called Islamic State group's Afghanistan affiliate (pictured, Kabul airport)

It comes as the US military said it used a drone strike to kill a member of the so-called Islamic State group's Afghanistan affiliate (pictured, Kabul airport)

'A mission unlike anything we've seen in our lifetimes': Boris Johnson praises UK troops on last flight out of Kabul ahead of 'remorseless deadline' - but PM says Britain 'will return' after 150 Brits and 1,000 Afghans were left behind 

Boris Johnson has described Britain's hasty scuttle from Afghanistan as 'the culmination of a mission unlike anything we've seen in our lifetimes' as the last remaining British troops leave Kabul, bringing our two decades of military involvement in the country to an end.

In a video clip uploaded to Twitter on Sunday, the Prime Minister said: 'UK troops and officials have worked around the clock to a remorseless deadline in harrowing conditions. They have expended all the patience and care and thought they possess to help people in fear for their lives.

'They've seen at first-hand barbaric terrorist attacks on the queues of people they were trying to comfort, as well as on our American friends. They didn't flinch. They kept calm. They got on with the job. It's thanks to their colossal exertions that this country has now processed, checked, vetted and airlifted more than 15,000 people to safety in less than two weeks.'   

As images from inside military aircraft were shared online by The Parachute Regiment and the Ministry of Defence last night showing exhausted British troops leaving Kabul, Mr Johnson pledged to return to Afghanistan when it is safe to do so. 

Some 150 British nationals and more than 1,000 Afghans who assisted British forces during the intervention have been left behind. In a bid to put a positive gloss on Britain's departure, the Prime Minister vowed to 'use all the diplomatic and humanitarian tools at our disposal to preserve the gains of the last 20 years'. 

Government sources insisted Britain's absence from the war-ravaged country was only temporary.

'There were lots of tears when we said goodbye. I feel so many things. I feel very sad for them [but] I'm relieved for me and I feel happy for the animals.'

The Ministry of Defence, which assisted his evacuation, confirmed he was through the airport in a tweet on Friday night.  It said: 'Pen Farthing and his pets were assisted through the system at Kabul airport by the UK armed forces. They are currently being supported while he awaits transportation. On the direction of the Defence Secretary, clearance for their charter flight has been sponsored by the UK Government.'

Mr Farthing told how his employees at the animal sanctuary drove with him to the airport in two cattle trucks. But he revealed they had been banned from crossing into the area controlled by British soldiers by armed Taliban fighters.

Soldiers helped him unload 125kg of dry pet food, 72 tins, 270 litres of water, 12 industrial size rolls of paper towel and 20 bottles of disinfectant in a warehouse.

Despite his misery at having to leave behind his staff, Mr Farthing's wife was chuffed he was on his way out. Kaisa was eating dinner with her father in Oslo when Pen video-called her from inside Kabul airport. 'You should have seen the smile on my face,' she said.

Following Thursday's carnage, Kaisa knew her husband was planning another attempt to reach the airport – but had no idea when. She said yesterday: 'He's now inside the airport and we had a quick video call. The second I saw him safely inside... you can imagine.'

Her husband and his animals escaping Kabul is the dream she has clung to ever since she was flown out of the city on a near-empty flight. She learned Pen, having made it through Taliban checkpoints, had been finally allowed to board a flight with 150 rescue cats and dogs from his Nowzad charity - but he was forced to leave his staff members behind.

'I know Pen had a very hard choice. He faced that same choice when he was inside the airport with his staff and their families on Thursday and the animals and the staff were not allowed through,' says Kaisa. 

'So, he went back to the compound to ensure everyone was safe and to discuss with them what to do. They decided he should go to the airport again with the dogs. 

'He was devastated to leave his staff but knew that by removing both the dogs and himself he would remove two big risk factors.' 

Mr Farthing's supporter and animal rights campaigner Dominic Dyer told the Mail: 'Pen is OK, but he is very stressed. He has no choice but to leave and bring the animals with him. We are looking forward to getting them to the UK.

'We are very pleased we've got him out and are very grateful to the British Government for their help, and for the support of the Armed Forces.' 

Kaisa was sitting at her mother's dining room table in a top borrowed from her sister and a newly bought pair of jeans. She had fled Kabul with nothing but a toothbrush and some deodorant.

Even the book she had been reading was left behind on the table beside the double bed that, until ten days ago, she shared with Mr Farthing. That they may soon hold each other again - and can start to plan their married life together - is enough to bring her to tears.

'I cried as I was leaving Kabul,' she says. 'I was one of the lucky ones. When I was in the Norwegian camp at the airport there were three kids - babies - I was playing with who'd been separated from their parents. We had to leave them behind.

'I thought, 'I won't see Kabul again. I might not see Pen again'. I was crying for those babies. What the f*** is this crisis about that we're leaving small kids behind who have no one?'

She showed a short video on her phone of the children playing at the airport. The soldiers and evacuees fussed over them.

'Two days later, I heard Norway had decided to bring them [the babies] over here. I told Pen on the phone that the babies were in Norway now. His first reaction was 'tell them we want to adopt one'. I want kids with Pen.'

The hope in her voice could not be further removed from the distraught woman I'd spoken to earlier this week. 

UK military personnel onboard a A400M aircraft departing Kabul, Afghanistan yesterday

UK military personnel onboard a A400M aircraft departing Kabul, Afghanistan yesterday 

Mr Farthing's group also narrowly avoided the airport suicide bomb blasts which rocked the area earlier this week, killing 12 US serviceman and up to 90 Afghans. Above: Wounded Afghans in hospital after the blasts

Mr Farthing's group also narrowly avoided the airport suicide bomb blasts which rocked the area earlier this week, killing 12 US serviceman and up to 90 Afghans. Above: Wounded Afghans in hospital after the blasts

'No one has any money': Taliban beat protesters with branches and hurl stones as desperate Afghans gather outside Kabul bank amid cash crisis 

Afghanistan's banking system is on the verge of collapse, with the country's banks still closed nearly two weeks after the Taliban seizure of power and leaving many people without access to cash amid fears of an economic and humanitarian disaster. 

Images show huge crowds of desperate Afghans queueing outside a bank in Kabul, with reports claiming that locals are getting unruly and are being pelted with stones and beaten with branches by Taliban militants standing guard as the country plunges into chaos. 

Sources at the Afghan central bank told CNN that banks remain shuttered days after the Taliban ordered them and other services to reopen because they have virtually run out of cash.

The Afghan economy is heavily reliant on access to foreign currency and international aid, most of which has been blocked since the capital fell to the jihadists in a stunning coup. Grants finance 75 per cent of Afghanistan's public spending, according to the World Bank.

The development has sparked fears of a severe economic and humanitarian crisis in the Central Asian country, where 47 per cent of households in Afghanistan live in poverty. 

On Thursday she feared the worst when, having been advised by the British Government to go to Kabul's airport to board a charter plane to safety, Mr Farthing - along with his 25 staff, their immediate families and 150 crated cats and dogs - was turned away at the last moment.

'I was fearing for his life,' Kaisa said. 'I had this heavy feeling. When he was outside the airport I was afraid because I hadn't heard from him.'

His group had been caught up in the hellish scenes on Thursday as Isis-K bombs killed at least 170 people, including 13 US military personnel.

Pen and his staff were tear-gassed and shot at as they fled for their lives.

'When they got out he called me he said 'oh, Kaisa Jan [an Afghan endearment meaning 'dear'], hell just broke loose. I've had an AK gun in my chest twice now'.' 

MoD sources last night made clear Mr Farthing and his convoy did not get preferential treatment and were not on board a military flight. 

While Mr Farthing's supporters said he had been turned away by the Taliban on Thursday, sources said he may have gone to the wrong gate.

Mr Ben Wallace initially dismissed Operation Ark, saying it would put 'people before pets' in the rush to flee Kabul. He later agreed to 'seek a slot' for the plane carrying out the mercy mission, but insisted the convoy would not be able to jump the queue. 

There were suggestions by Mr Farthing's supporters his change of tone was prompted by an intervention from Boris Johnson's animal-loving wife Carrie - but this was denied by Downing Street sources.

Asked if Mr Farthing had been a diversion to the overall evacuation mission, Mr Wallace told LBC: 'I think it has taken up too much time of my senior commanders dealing with this issue when they should be focused on dealing with the humanitarian crisis.'

But he added: 'I hope he comes back, he was advised to come back, his wife came back last Friday, so I hope he does as well.'

The only sadness for Kaisa now is that Pen has been forced to leave his beloved staff behind. 

'When the Taliban took over Kabul, I thought 'if you have to put all the animals to sleep, do it'. There will be other dogs but you can't do anything if you're dead,' she says.

'But then I realised something. Pen has a mother, a brother and me. We are his three family members. Many of his staff have not gone home to their families during lockdown but stayed to help him. 

'When there was a big kidnapping threat here a few years ago they wouldn't go home. They stayed in the office to protect him. They are his family.' 

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2021-08-30 07:25:16Z
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