'They shouted, ‘save my baby’ and threw the babies at us'

Desperate mothers reported to throw babies over Kabul airport barbed wire

British officer says not all infants made it to safety; thousands stranded in no-man’s land between Taliban fighters and Western troops

A soldier at Kabul Airport lifts a young child in a Sky News report from Afghanistan, August 19, 2021 (Screenshot)
A soldier at Kabul Airport lifts a young child in a Sky News report from Afghanistan, August 19, 2021 (Screenshot)

Thousands of Afghans were packed on Thursday between Taliban checkpoints and a United States-imposed ring of steel around Kabul’s main airport, desperate to get aboard any flight out, following the Islamist group’s return to power.

In some cases, desperate women resorted to throwing their own babies over barbed wire to British soldiers inside the airport, Sky News reported.

The United Kingdom-based outlet quoted an unnamed officer as saying that not all of those attempts were successful.

“It was terrible, women were throwing their babies over the razor wire, asking the soldiers to take them, some got caught in the wire,” he said. “I’m worried for my men, I’m counseling some, everyone cried last night.”

The Independent quoted a Parachute Regiment officer giving a similar description.

“The mothers were desperate, they were getting beaten by the Taliban. They shouted, ‘save my baby’ and threw the babies at us, some of the babies fell on the barbed wire. It was awful what happened. By the end of the night there wasn’t one man among us who was not crying,” he said.

Meanwhile, Afghans were mobbing foreign embassy compounds in the capital, as rumors spread that visas were up for grabs or safe passage on offer at least as far as the airport.

Unconfirmed reports on social media said that several people have been killed, as US forces and the Taliban struggle to contain the desperate throngs on their respective sides of an unofficial no-man’s land.

US soldiers stand guard along the perimeter at the international airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, on August 16, 2021. (AP Photo/Shekib Rahmani)

“I went to the airport with my kids and family… the Taliban and Americans were shooting,” said one man, who until recently had worked for a foreign NGO. “Despite that, people were still moving forward [to get in] because they knew a situation worse than death awaited them outside the airport.”

There have been chaotic scenes since the weekend, when the Taliban drove unopposed into the capital after a two-week lightning offensive that capped a simmering 20-year insurgency.

This picture, taken on August 15, 2021, shows a barbed wire wall near a police checkpoint, two kilometers (1.2 miles) from “Friendship Bridge” over the Amu Darya river, which separates Uzbekistan and Afghanistan near Termez. (Temur Ismailov/AFP)

Distressing pictures and video have emerged of people desperately trying to get aboard any flight leaving — even resorting to climbing on a US military Hercules as it rolled down the runway for take-off.

Some semblance of order has been restored, but thousands have been left stranded between the Taliban and US lines — clinging to an unrealistic hope that they will be let in and evacuated.

Many do have visas for a foreign destination — and say they were promised evacuations — but they simply can’t get in.

“I spoke to my friend who is there and he has a letter from Spain saying he can leave with them, but when he tries to go to the gate they threaten to shoot him,” a man, who asked not to be identified, told AFP. “The Spanish people tell him if he gets inside, he will be okay, but he can’t get inside.”

Hundreds of people gather near a US Air Force C-17 transport plane at the perimeter of the international airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Monday, August 16, 2021. (AP Photo/Shekib Rahmani)

The Taliban have provided official escorts for some foreign embassies — taking their nationals as well as Afghans — and they are being allowed in by the Americans.

But even that journey — which can take several hours for just a few kilometers — is fraught with heartbreak.

“There were people beating on the windows of the bus, trying to get inside,” said a woman who made it through on Wednesday. “The Taliban with us fired in the air to chase them away.”

There was desperation near the diplomatic enclave as well on Thursday, as thousands clamored to get the attention of anyone at now largely deserted embassies.

“I was told that if I get my name and my details and my phone on a paper to the French embassy they will take me,” said one man.

Hundreds of people sat on pavements begging for scraps of paper or to borrow a pen to do the same.

Washington said on Wednesday that the Taliban were reneging on pledges to allow Afghans who worked with the US and its allies out of the country.

“We have seen reports that the Taliban… are blocking Afghans who wish to leave the country from reaching the airport,” Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman told reporters.

“We expect them to allow all American citizens, all third-country nationals and all Afghans who wish to leave to do so safely and without harassment.”

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