Trudeau says Canada has evacuated 807 Afghans as crisis overshadows election campaign
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 15/08/2021 (1229 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
OTTAWA – Justin Trudeau revealed for the first time on Monday the number of refugees Canada has helped to flee Afghanistan, as the deepening crisis in the war-torn country threatens to overshadow the Liberal leader’s re-election campaign.
Speaking on the campaign trail in Longueuil, Que., Trudeau said 807 Afghans have been evacuated under a special immigration program along with 34 Canadian diplomats and Canadian Armed Forces personnel. His government had previously declined to say how many refugees it had assisted, citing security concerns.
Trudeau said the Taliban should end violence and hostilities and allow those who want to leave Afghanistan to do so safely. Canada is working with its allies, including the United States and the United Kingdom, to help as many Afghans as possible, he added, noting that a number of Canadian special forces members are still on the ground alongside the American forces to help secure the Kabul airport.
“We are staging out of Kuwait, including with military aircraft. We are looking very closely with our allies at what those next steps could be,” he said.
The 807 Afghans who have been evacuated were assisted under a program announced last month to resettle the families of Afghan interpreters and other support staff who worked with the Canadian Armed Forces and diplomatic mission in Afghanistan. More than 500 have already arrived in Canada, Trudeau said.
Canada also evacuated two international diplomats and five NATO personnel, Trudeau said, adding his goal is to resettle up to 20,000 Afghans as soon as possible. His government announced the 20,000 target last week, but said that figure would only include those who have already fled Afghanistan for other countries.
“There also remain a number of Canadian citizens and dual Canadian-Afghan citizens on the ground, we are working closely with and tracking as much as possible in the chaos right now,” Trudeau said.
“(We are) very much prioritizing the evacuation of them, if it is at all possible.”
Trudeau’s visit to Gov. Gen. Mary Simon on Sunday to request an early election came as Canada suspended its diplomatic mission in Kabul. The Taliban swept into Afghanistan’s capital that day after the government collapsed and the Afghan president joined an exodus of his fellow citizens and foreigners.
Afghans rushed to the Kabul airport Monday as thousands tried to flee after the Taliban seized power. Some clung to the side of a U.S. military plane before takeoff, in a widely shared video that captured the sense of desperation as America’s 20-year war comes to a chaotic end.
Senior U.S. military officials said the chaos at the Kabul airport left seven people dead, including some who fell from a departing American military transport jet.
“People both in the country and around the world have been dismayed by the speed at which things have happened, and quite frankly surprised by the speed at which things have happened,” Trudeau said.
He said Canada will send aircraft to evacuate more Afghans if the Kabul airport is secured.
Andrew Rusk, the founder of a national advocacy campaign to bring interpreters and local staff to Canada, said his group is aware of at least 2,000 individuals still in Afghanistan and waiting to be evacuated.
“It’s an absolute mess on the ground,” he said.
He said the government didn’t move quickly enough to rescue the Afghans who helped Canada and the election call now could slow the progress of the evacuation.
“It’s concerning that we now have the added distraction of an election, while we are trying to manage what has quickly become an incredible humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan,” he said.
“How interpreters and other staff in Kabul will be processed with the embassy closed, and with Canadians out of the country, remains an open question. And what’s definitely clear, is there is no safe passage for interpreters and other staff that are outside of Kabul.”
Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole said the situation in Afghanistan is “heartbreaking,” and the Trudeau government was aware for at least six months that the Taliban would take over after the U.S. announced it will withdraw its forces from the county.
“The Trudeau government did nothing, even to secure folks that had worked at the embassy, interpreters,” he told reporters in Ottawa.
“Anyone that’s at risk because they were supporting our efforts there in the military, aid and diplomacy, we need to get them back.”
On Monday night, O’Toole sent out another statement to say that if elected, “a Conservative government will not recognize the Taliban as the legitimate government of Afghanistan.” He also said he would make sure aid sent to the people of Afghanistan would not go to the Taliban.
Asked why his government did not act sooner, Trudeau insisted it began working on evacuations in the spring.
The Canadian government previously resettled more than 800 interpreters and support staff over the past decade.
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said Canada is responsible for bringing those who helped its efforts in Afghanistan to safety.
“To the people in Afghanistan, for the folks that are here, the Canadians that have got ties to Afghanistan, my heart breaks for the situation you’re going through right now,” he told reporters in Toronto.
Green party Leader Annamie Paul said she wants the Governor General to recall Parliament for an emergency debate on Afghanistan, noting that the United Nations Security Council and the United Kingdom Parliament both called emergency debates on the crisis.
Trudeau called an election knowing that the Taliban was marching on Kabul, leaving those behind who tied themselves to Canada during its military operation, Paul said.
“All the work done by our military risks being undone without swift, co-ordinated international action. Will we allow their sacrifice to be in vain?”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 16, 2021.
— With files from The Associated Press
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This story was produced with the financial assistance of the Facebook and Canadian Press News Fellowship.