header banner
WORLD

UK halts removal of Nepalese security guards who worked at British embassy in Kabul

KABUL, April 6: The British government has paused the deportation of a group of Nepalese security guards who worked at the British embassy in Kabul and were airlifted to the UK after the Taliban’s takeover.
By Agencies

KABUL, April 6: The British government has paused the deportation of a group of Nepalese security guards who worked at the British embassy in Kabul and were airlifted to the UK after the Taliban’s takeover.


The Home Office on Wednesday said the removal of the group has been paused for now.


The group of 13 Nepalese security guards faced the risk of deportation after 10 of them were detained by the police in an early morning raid on March 27.


The Gurkha guards were arrested and taken to the immigration removal centres near Gatwick and Heathrow airports.


Related story

UN Secretary General condemns Kabul attack


A Home Office spokesperson told Radio 4’s The World Tonight: "Removal of this cohort has been paused, pending further review."


Some of the men who were arrested last week were released from the detention centre on Wednesday.


The men, Nepalese and Indians, were living in a hotel in London following their rescue from Kabul after the Taliban took over in August, 2021.


They were employed to guard officials in a high-security compound housing the UK and Canadian embassies in Kabul.


Some of the men were granted indefinite right to live in the UK by the Home Office while others were awaiting final decisions.


They were airlifted among 25,000 people who worked for the British military and the UK government in Afghanistan.


Jamie Bell of Duncan Lewis Solicitors, who is representing some of the men, welcomed the move by the Home Office but asked why they were detained in the first place.


He told Radio 4 that though he is “delighted for our clients that there won’t be pending removal" but said, “it raises the question about why this has happened to begin with”.


"Why couldn’t this review and consideration happen before there was significant media interest and before legal action had to be threatened?"


 

Related Stories
POLITICS

Ban Ki-moon condemns Kabul suicide bomb attack

SOCIETY

Canadian federal govt settles lawsuit over deadly...

SOCIETY

Four days on, MoFA remains mum on death of 2 Nepal...

Editorial

What now?

POLITICS

PM apprises House of Kabul Attack, reconstruction...

Trending

Top Videos

Bold Preety willing to fight for her musical career

Awareness among people on heart diseases has improved in Nepal’

Print still remains the numbers of one platform

Bringing home a gold medal is on my bucket

What is Nepal's roadmap to sage child rights