Ex-UK Marine leaves Kabul with dogs, cats but no local staff

Ex-UK Marine leaves Kabul with dogs, cats but no local staff

A privately funded chartered plane carrying Paul "Pen" Farthing and his animals took off from Kabul

Associated PressUpdated: Sunday, August 29, 2021, 11:23 PM IST
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London: A former UK Royal Marine who waged a high-profile campaign to leave Afghanistan with almost 200 rescued dogs and cats has flown to safety - with the animals, but without his charity's Afghan staff, who were left behind in Kabul.

A privately funded chartered plane carrying Paul "Pen" Farthing and his animals took off from Kabul late Saturday after a saga that gripped and divided Britain, raising difficult questions about the relative value placed on human and animal lives.

Animal welfare campaigner Dominic Dyer, who has acted as a UK-based spokesman for Farthing, said the plane was due to land at London's Heathrow Airport on Sunday.

Farthing, who started the Nowzad charity after serving with British forces in Afghanistan 15 years ago, was eligible for evacuation in Britain's military airlift along with Afghan members of his staff and their dependents.

But he refused to leave without the animals.

For days, Farthing used social media and press interviews to chronicle his attempts to depart with his four-legged companions amid the chaotic exodus from Kabul airport, as his supporters lobbied the British government for help with a rescue effort dubbed Operation Ark.

Farthing gained backing from celebrities including comedian Ricky Gervais, and many offers to adopt the rescued animals. But he also drew criticism from those who said the case was draining time and energy from the task of rescuing Afghans at risk from the country's new Taliban rulers.

Britain says it evacuated more than 15,000 UK citizens and vulnerable Afghans in a two-week airlift that ended Saturday.

But officials say as many as 1,100 Afghans who were entitled to come to the UK have been left behind.

Some British lawmakers who have been trying to help stranded constituents and their families believe the true total is higher.

"What would you say if I sent an ambulance to save my dog rather than to save your mother?" said Conservative lawmaker Tom Tugendhat, who served with the British Army in Afghanistan.

"We've just used a lot of troops to bring in 200 dogs. Meanwhile my interpreter's family is likely to be killed," Tugendhat told radio station LBC on Saturday.

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