LONDON: Senior military chiefs, politicians and diplomats in the UK have urged Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to prevent the deportation of an Afghan veteran to Rwanda, The Independent reported on Wednesday.
The war pilot flew 30 combat missions against the Taliban and was forced to flee to Britain. Because he could find no safe and legal route, he traveled on a small boat to reach the country. He was praised by his coalition forces supervisor as a âpatriot to his nation.â
However, the Home Office said because he traveled through Italy, Switzerland and France in order to enter England, his claim for asylum in the UK may be denied.Â
The Home Office informed the pilot that he âmay also be removable to Rwanda,â and that his personal information could be shared with Rwandan authorities, The Independent reported.
Former International Development Secretary Rory Stewart called the pilotâs story âprofoundly shockingâ because it contradicts the governmentâs promises made to those in Afghanistan.Â
âWe are shirking our responsibilities towards Afghans who risked their lives to fight alongside us and who are now at risk of their lives,â he told The Independent.Â
Sir Laurie Bristow, who was British ambassador to Afghanistan during the fall of Kabul, said the lives of Afghans who fought for the UK âare at risk as a result.â
He told The Independent: âMany of our own service people owe their lives to Afghans who worked and fought alongside them in Afghanistan.â
Sir Richard Barrons, a former chief of joint operations who served in Afghanistan, said the pilotâs route to Britain should not impact his asylum claim âconsidering the mess the government made with the evacuation process.â
When confronted on Wednesday about the Afghan veteranâs threatened deportation to Rwanda during the âTodayâ program, British Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab said the government is determined to crack down on âcriminal gangs who feed the illegal asylum tradeâ by bringing people to the UK on small boats.
But Col. Simon Diggins, who served as a defense attache in Afghanistan, told The Independent: âWe shouldnât accept the terminology that he got here âillegallyâ; that is not the right language for people like him who have no other means of getting here safely. It is appalling that this man who was in our allied forces is being treated in this way.â
Maj. Gen. Tim Cross, who served in Iraq, the Balkans and Northern Ireland, said: âIf this man was a member of Afghan forces fighting alongside the coalition then the risks to him are obvious.
âThe whole Afghanistan withdrawal was terribly done, and cases like these are the human consequences of mistakes we made in places like Afghanistan and Iraq.â
Former Defense Minister Kevan Jones told The Independent: âWe have a huge debt to these people. This is no way to treat them. Itâs a stain on Britainâs great reputation of supporting its friends.
âWe always stick by our friends. We should continue to do that. This government is clearly not doing that in this case and many others.â
Sunak has promised to review the veteranâs case. On Monday, he asked the Home Office to look further into his situation.