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Ailan Evans, DCNF
Facebook was part of a joint effort that helped airlift 175 Afghans to Mexico, the tech giant said in a statement Wednesday.
Facebook said it was attempting to evacuate some of its own employees and associates when it became involved in an effort to extract journalists and their family members, a company spokesperson told the Daily Caller News Foundation on Wednesday. Axios first reported Facebook’s involvement.
“In the process of assisting Facebook employees and close partners leave Afghanistan, we joined an effort to help a group of journalists and their families who were in grave danger,” the spokesperson said.
Mexico’s Ministry of Foreign affairs said in a statement Wednesday that 175 Afghan citizens, including “social media workers, activists and independent journalists and their families” arrived at the Mexico City International Airport. The agency said the group arrived on an Egypt air flight and was assisted by the governments of Egypt, Iran and the United Arab Emirates.
“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs is in communication with the representatives of these groups that are requesting protection for humanitarian reasons, in addition to the governments of other countries and other areas of the federal government in order to make their arrival possible,” the agency said.
Facebook also thanked the foreign governments, and will reportedly help cover the costs of the flights and evacuation, according to the Mexican government.
“Thanks to the leadership of the Mexican government, and the support of the UAE in providing the initial landing, the journalists have been welcomed in Mexico,” the Facebook spokesperson said.
The last U.S. flight from Afghanistan left Kabul airport Monday afternoon, leaving behind several hundred Americans as well as thousands of Afghans who assisted U.S. forces in the war effort.
Thomas Catenacci, DCNF
The U.S. abandoned more than half of all interpreters and Afghans who applied for special immigrant visas (SIV), a senior State Department official told The Wall Street Journal.
The official didn’t share specific information or figures, but estimated that a majority of the visa applicants were left behind in Afghanistan, the WSJ reported. The Department of State doesn’t have exact data on who was evacuated from the Middle Eastern nation after the Taliban took control of the capital city of Kabul, due to the urgent nature of the operation.
“I would say it’s the majority of them,” the administration official told the WSJ. “Just based on anecdotal information about the populations we were able to support.”
“Everybody who lived it is haunted by the choices we had to make and by the people we were not able to help,” the official continued.
The U.S. evacuated a total of 123,000 people from Afghanistan including an estimated 6,000 Americans during the operation, which began on Aug. 15, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said during remarks on Tuesday. Blinken didn’t mention how many of the individuals were SIV applicants.
Pentagon spokesperson John Kirby estimated that the U.S. had evacuated 7,000 Afghan SIV applicants during a press briefing on Friday.
“This has been a massive military, diplomatic, and humanitarian undertaking – one of the most difficult in our nation’s history – and an extraordinary feat of logistics and coordination under some of the most challenging circumstances imaginable,” Blinken said.
On Monday, the last remaining American troops who had been coordinating the massive evacuation operation departed Kabul. Blinken said Tuesday that the military mission in Afghanistan had ended, but that a diplomatic mission to transport people out of the country was beginning.