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Reuters
Reuters
Politics

Afghan evacuees start arriving in Kuwait, U.S. envoy says

FILE PHOTO: Evacuees board an aircraft as the U.S. Department of Defense is committed to supporting the U.S. State Department in the departure of U.S. and allied civilian personnel from Afghanistan, and to evacuate Afghan allies safely, in this recent undated handout picture. Staff Sgt. Brandon Cribelar/U.S. Air Force /Handout via REUTERS

The first flight carrying at-risk Afghan evacuees arrived in Kuwait, which has approved passage for 5,000 under an agreement with the United States following the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan, the U.S. envoy said on Tuesday.

Ambassador Alina Romanowski said in a Twitter post that the flight arrived at a coalition military installation in Kuwait, but did not say how many were aboard. She posted images showing children among them.

Other Gulf Arab states have agreed to temporarily host Afghan evacuees, with the United Arab Emirates expected to welcome 5,000 and Qatar 8,000.

The UAE and Qatar have also been facilitating international evacuation efforts as the United States and its allies race to move out all foreigners and vulnerable Afghans before the expiry of an Aug. 31 deadline agreed with the Taliban.

The UAE has so far helped evacuate 20,500 people, its foreign ministry said on Tuesday, including 8,500 transported to the Gulf state via its national carriers and airports.

Qatar's Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani told Fox News on Sunday that Doha has helped move out around 7,000 people and was continuing to do so.

Sheikh Mohammed said Qatar, which has hosted a Taliban office since 2013 for peace talks, was acting as an "impartial mediator" between the group and other countries to help ease the process, including transport to Kabul airport.

Bahrain is also allowing planes carrying evacuees to stop over in the kingdom. Its national carrier Gulf Air operated a flight from Isa Air Base to Dulles International Airport outside Washington on Monday as part of evacuation efforts.

(Reporting by Ghaida Ghantous; Editing by Alison Williams)

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