Pen Farthing stuck at Kabul Airport with staff and animals after Taliban 'block evacuation'

The former Royal Marine seeking to secure the passage of 200 dogs and cats alongside his animal shelter staff out of Afghanistan says the Taliban is blocking their evacuation.

Paul Farthing, known as Pen, founded the Nowzad shelter in Kabul after serving with the British Army in Afghanistan in the mid-2000s, with the organisation rescuing dogs, cats and donkeys.

Since the collapse of the Afghan government, he has campaigned to have his staff and their families as well as 140 dogs and 60 cats evacuated from the country in a privately chartered Airbus A330.

Pen Farthing said the Taliban have blocked evacuation from Afghanistan. (PA)
Pen Farthing said the Taliban have blocked evacuation from Afghanistan. (PA) (PA)

On Tuesday, defence secretary Ben Wallace cleared the path for Farthing, his staff and animals, saying officials would seek to facilitate their departure aboard the chartered aircraft if they arrived at Kabul Airport.

But Farthing has revealed that his team are being denied entry and pleaded with the Taliban to allow them through to get on the plane.

Addressing Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen, Farthing tweeted: “Dear Sir; my team and my animals are stuck at airport circle.

“We have a flight waiting. Can you please facilitate safe passage into the airport for our convoy?

“We are an NGO [non-governmental organisation] who will come back to Afghanistan but right now I want to get everyone out safely.”

Farthing added: “We have been here for 10 hours after being assured that we would have safe passage.

“Truly would like to go home now.”

Speaking to The Sun, Farthing said the situation was "getting really desperate" and that the team had "hours" before their animals start dying.

He added: “We are in touch with the British forces but they say they are powerless to help.”

The evacuation has been made more urgent after a minister warned that a “highly lethal” terror attack could strike Kabul within hours.

Armed forces minister James Heappey warned on Thursday that there is “very credible reporting” of an “imminent” and “severe” threat to Kabul Airport.

He called on those queuing outside Hamid Karzai International Airport to move to safety amid concerns over an affiliate of the so-called Islamic State in Afghanistan, know as Isis-K, an enemy of the Taliban.

The threat is heaping extra pressure on the operation to help people flee the nation captured by the Taliban, with Tuesday’s deadline for foreign troops to leave fast approaching.

Mr Heappey told BBC Breakfast: “The credibility of the reporting has reached the stage where we believe there is a very imminent, a highly lethal, attack, possible within Kabul.

KABUL, AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 25: People who want to flee the country continue to wait around Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan on August 25, 2021. (Photo by Haroon Sabawoon/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
People who want to flee Afghanistan continue to wait around Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul. (Getty) (Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

“And, as a consequence, we’ve had to change the travel advice to advise people not to come to the airport, indeed to move away from the airport, find a place of safety and await further instruction.”

Defence secretary Wallace held a briefing with MPs on Wednesday, where he is reported to have said it would be a “better option” for those who still need to leave the country to travel across the border.

Colonel Richard Kemp, former head of British forces in Afghanistan, said this morning that the threat of a terrorist attack at Kabul Airport “has existed right the way from when this evacuation began”.

He told BBC Breakfast: "There could be a terrorist attack of some sort against the forces in the airport, maybe forces outside the airport, and of course the people trying to get in.”

Pen Farthing founded the Nowzad shelter in Kabul after serving with the British Army in Afghanistan in the mid-2000s. (PA)
Pen Farthing founded the Nowzad shelter in Kabul after serving with the British Army in Afghanistan in the mid-2000s. (PA) (PA)

Farthing’s campaign to flee Afghanistan was given a boost on Wednesday when Wallace authorised the Ministry Of Defence allow Farthing and his staff on board the chartered aircraft, along with the animals.

Farthing previously said the animals would be transported in the aircraft’s hold and that once his staff were accommodated any spare seats on the plane could be filled by other people cleared for passage by UK authorities, with the flight able to take 250 passengers in total.

Latest figures from the Ministry of Defence (MoD) showed that 11,474 people had been able to leave Afghanistan since the evacuation mission Operation Pitting began on 13 August.

But the end of the operation is rapidly approaching after US president Joe Biden rejected calls from Boris Johnson and other allies to delay his 31 August withdrawal date for the remaining US troops, who are providing security at Kabul airport.

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