Red Cross leaders describe scenes of ‘absolute chaos’ at airports but praise extraordinary dignity of the people

They arrived shoeless and shivering, with some toddlers wearing the same nappies they wore when fleeing their homes days earlier. Volunteers have described the extraordinary dignity and stoicism of the Afghan refugees, including about 2,200 children, who were airlifted to the UK out of the clutches of the Taliban.

Some of the new arrivals were passing out from exhaustion in airport terminals, said Dara Leonard, a team leader for the British Red Cross. Others, including pregnant women and “the sick and incredibly frail” were rushed straight to hospital.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Ministers could offer one-off payments as way to end public sector strikes

Strikes must be called off for talks to start, says No 10,…

Government spending on Covid consultancy contracts rises to £175m

Chair of parliamentary committee expresses ‘shock’ and announces investigation Coronavirus – latest…

Paris Lees: ‘It drives me crazy when people introduce me as a trans activist’

She survived a troubled youth – and a spell in prison –…

Vast staff cuts imminent at V&A, insiders say

Curators and conservators said to be in line of fire, ‘hollowing out…