
Newsreader Sandy Gall personally lobbied Margaret Thatcher's government to back the Mujahideen
But behind the scenes, veteran Scottish broadcaster Sandy Gall was personally lobbying Margaret Thatcher 's government to step up support for Afghanistan 's Mujahideen rebels in their war against the Soviet-installed regime, according to declassified papers.
Gall, whose death at the age of 97 was announced last week, became a passionate supporter of the Mujahideen cause and a confidante of their leader, Ahmad Shah Massoud, during trips to the country as a war correspondent.
He first visited Afghanistan in 1982 when he was smuggled in by resistance fighters to make a documentary highlighting claims of Russian brutality towards the civilian population.
During a 60-year career reporting from the world's trouble spots, he would become an unofficial emissary of the British government to the Mujahideen and in 1986 he and his late wife Eleanor founded a charity to raise money for victims of the war.
After the Soviets withdrew from Afghanistan in 1989, the country descended into civil war with various rival factions fighting the Moscow-backed government of President Mohammad Najibullah.
When Gall returned to Afghanistan on a fact-finding mission, he wrote to the prime minister's private secretary, Charles Powell, raising concerns about the deteriorating situation.
He wrote: 'I came away with a very strong feeling that the situation is critical. The main fact I learned from a couple of talks with Massoud is that he has received no weapons via the Pakistani pipeline at all this year.'
During the Soviet occupation, MI6 formed close links with Massoud, who was regarded as more pro-Western than his rival Mujahideen commanders, and provided his group with substantial military aid, including Blowpipe anti-aircraft missiles, channelled through the Pakistani ISI intelligence service.
But Gall learned the ISI had cut off the supply of weapons.
'This is a deliberate policy,' Gall wrote. 'They have always resented his independence, and his refusal to take ISI instructions has now infuriated them to the extent of cutting off his arms supply.'
He urged Mrs Thatcher to increase military support for Massoud and press the Pakistani government to restart the flow of weapons.
Mr Powell replied that 'our own ability to influence the conduct of the war is very limited'.
President Najibullah was eventually overthrown in 1992, but after four more years of civil war and in-fighting the country was taken over by Massoud's arch-rivals the Taliban.
Massoud was assassinated by al-Qaeda linked suicide bombers in 2001. Born Henderson Alexander Gall in British Malaya, Gall was the son a rubber plantation manager.
The family moved back to Scotland when he was four and he was educated at Glenalmond College, in Perthshire, and Aberdeen University.
He joined ITN in 1963 and made a name as a fearless foreign correspondent, landing himself in countless scrapes. He fronted News At Ten for many years until his retirement in 1992.
In 2011, Gall was appointed CMG in recognition of his service to the people of Afghanistan.
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Daily Mail
9 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Newsreader Sandy Gall personally lobbied Margaret Thatcher's government to back the Mujahideen
For more than 20 years, he was the face of impartiality as a top newsreader on ITN's flagship News At Ten bulletin. But behind the scenes, veteran Scottish broadcaster Sandy Gall was personally lobbying Margaret Thatcher 's government to step up support for Afghanistan 's Mujahideen rebels in their war against the Soviet-installed regime, according to declassified papers. Gall, whose death at the age of 97 was announced last week, became a passionate supporter of the Mujahideen cause and a confidante of their leader, Ahmad Shah Massoud, during trips to the country as a war correspondent. He first visited Afghanistan in 1982 when he was smuggled in by resistance fighters to make a documentary highlighting claims of Russian brutality towards the civilian population. During a 60-year career reporting from the world's trouble spots, he would become an unofficial emissary of the British government to the Mujahideen and in 1986 he and his late wife Eleanor founded a charity to raise money for victims of the war. After the Soviets withdrew from Afghanistan in 1989, the country descended into civil war with various rival factions fighting the Moscow-backed government of President Mohammad Najibullah. When Gall returned to Afghanistan on a fact-finding mission, he wrote to the prime minister's private secretary, Charles Powell, raising concerns about the deteriorating situation. He wrote: 'I came away with a very strong feeling that the situation is critical. The main fact I learned from a couple of talks with Massoud is that he has received no weapons via the Pakistani pipeline at all this year.' During the Soviet occupation, MI6 formed close links with Massoud, who was regarded as more pro-Western than his rival Mujahideen commanders, and provided his group with substantial military aid, including Blowpipe anti-aircraft missiles, channelled through the Pakistani ISI intelligence service. But Gall learned the ISI had cut off the supply of weapons. 'This is a deliberate policy,' Gall wrote. 'They have always resented his independence, and his refusal to take ISI instructions has now infuriated them to the extent of cutting off his arms supply.' He urged Mrs Thatcher to increase military support for Massoud and press the Pakistani government to restart the flow of weapons. Mr Powell replied that 'our own ability to influence the conduct of the war is very limited'. President Najibullah was eventually overthrown in 1992, but after four more years of civil war and in-fighting the country was taken over by Massoud's arch-rivals the Taliban. Massoud was assassinated by al-Qaeda linked suicide bombers in 2001. Born Henderson Alexander Gall in British Malaya, Gall was the son a rubber plantation manager. The family moved back to Scotland when he was four and he was educated at Glenalmond College, in Perthshire, and Aberdeen University. He joined ITN in 1963 and made a name as a fearless foreign correspondent, landing himself in countless scrapes. He fronted News At Ten for many years until his retirement in 1992. In 2011, Gall was appointed CMG in recognition of his service to the people of Afghanistan.


Times
9 hours ago
- Times
Afghans in MoD data breach can claim £4,000 compensation
Afghans who had their 'lives put at risk' because of a data breach have been told they can claim up to £4,000 in compensation four years after the incident happened. Human error resulted in the personal information of 265 Afghans who had worked alongside British troops being shared with hundreds of others who were on the same email distribution list in September 2021. In December 2023 the UK information commissioner fined the Ministry of Defence (MoD) £350,000 and said the 'egregious' breach could have been life-threatening. John Healey, who was shadow defence secretary, said in 2021: 'We told these Afghans interpreters we would keep them safe, instead this breach has needlessly put lives at risk.' On Friday afternoon the MoD slipped out a statement to update MPs and the Afghans on the case, saying that Afghans were now entitled to compensation. In a written ministerial statement, Lord Coaker said the MoD was taking a 'proactive' approach to the historical data-handling incident involving those who had applied to the Afghan Relocation and Assistance Policy (Arap) scheme in 2021. He said the emails mistakenly made recipients' email addresses visible to all, instead of using the blind carbon copy function. Coaker said the MoD would 'make good' on previous ministers' commitments to financially compensate those individuals affected. It was unclear why it had taken a year since Labour had entered government to arrange the payments. He said: 'I can confirm to members the Ministry of Defence will be directly contacting those individuals who were affected by the data incident. Once a response is received and the affected individual's identity confirmed, a single ex-gratia payment of up to £4,000 per individual will be made.' The total cost is expected to be in the region of £1.6 million. Lord Coaker said 'every effort will be made to ensure payments are made as quickly as reasonably practical'. 'I cannot undo past mistakes, but I wish to assure members that in my role, as minister for the armed forces, I intend to drive improvement in the department's data handling training and practices. '[The Ministry of] Defence's record on these topics must improve and I am determined to ensure it does,' he added. The UK information commissioner found previously that the department did not have the procedures in place to ensure group emails were sent securely to Afghans seeking relocation. 'This deeply regrettable data breach let down those to whom our country owes so much,' John Edwards, who was the UK information commissioner, said in 2023. He said it was a 'particularly egregious breach of the obligation of security owed to these people, thus warranting the financial penalty my office imposes today'. The Times reported in September 2021 how the MoD sent an email to a distribution list of Afghan nationals eligible for evacuation using the 'To' field, with personal information inadvertently disclosed. The email addresses could be seen by all recipients, including the thumbnail pictures that 55 people had on their email profiles. Two people even 'replied all' to the entire list of recipients, with one of them providing their location. The original email was sent by the team in charge of the Arap, which is responsible for assisting the relocation of Afghan citizens who worked for the UK government in Afghanistan. There were concerns at the time that the data disclosed could have fallen into the hands of the Taliban. The Information Commissioner's Office said the team had relied on 'blind carbon copy' (bcc) when sending emails at the time, which carried a 'significant risk of human error'. Soon after the data breach, the MoD contacted the people affected asking them to delete the email, change their email address, and inform the Arap team of their new contact details via a secure form.


BBC News
13 hours ago
- BBC News
Payout offered to Afghans hit by UK data breaches
Afghan nationals whose personal information was mistakenly exposed by the Ministry of Defence in 2021 will be offered up to £4,000 each in compensation, the government has said. The data breaches affected 277 people, some of whom had worked for the UK government and were in hiding from insurgent Taliban forces at the Minister Luke Pollard said he could not "undo past mistakes" but promised that the payments would be made "as quickly as reasonably practical". The government expects the total cost to be around £1.6m and comes on top of the £350,000 it had to pay after receiving a fine from the data watchdog. The biggest breach took place in September 2021 when the Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy (Arap) team was working to evacuate people from Afghanistan following the chaotic withdrawal of western troops.A mass email was sent to those, such as interpreters, whose work with the UK government meant they could be targeted by the Taliban and therefore made them eligible to be relocated. Their email addresses were added to the 'To' field instead of the 'blind carbon copy' (Bcc) section, meaning their names could be seen by all Ministry of Defence later launched an internal investigation that revealed two similar breaches on 7 September and 13 September of that Humber from the Leigh Day law firm which is representing some of those affected said the government's statement about compensation contained "little information"."As far as we are aware, there has been no consultation with those affected or their legal advisors about the scheme - it is not clear the criteria that will be used to identify the proposed payment amount."In our client's case, he and his family spent five very scared months in hiding in Kabul concerned that the Taliban were now aware that he had assisted UK forces and were looking for him. "He feared for his life and was aware of the Taliban beating and killing others that had assisted UK forces. "We will need to review critically with our client whether any sum that is now being offered adequately compensates him for distress that he has undoubtedly suffered." After investigating the breaches in 2023, information commissioner John Edwards said the error could have led to a "threat to life" and had "let down those to whom our country owes so much".The commissioner initially fined the government £1m but that was reduced to £700,000 in recognition of the measures taken by the Ministry of Defence to report the incident, limit its impact and the difficulties of the situation for teams handling the relocation of was further reduced to £350,000 as part of a change in approach by the watchdog to public sector fines. Announcing the compensation payouts in a statement on Friday, Pollard said his department would "drive improvement in the department's data handling training and practices".Earlier this week, the government announced that the Arap scheme was closing to new applicants, having resettled 21,316 Afghans in the half of those brought to the UK were children, and a quarter were women. A Home Office paper published on Tuesday said Defence Secretary John Healey believed the scheme had "fulfilled its original purpose".It said the scheme could now be shut down "not least so that defence efforts and resources can be focused where they are most needed - on our nation's security, to combat the acute threats and destabilising behaviour of our adversaries".