
Taliban deny arresting or monitoring Afghans after UK data leak
Thousands of Afghans who worked with the United Kingdom were brought to Britain with their families in a secret programme after a 2022 data breach put their lives at risk, the UK government revealed on Tuesday.
The scheme was only revealed after the UK High Court lifted a super-gag order banning any reports of the events.
UK Defence Minister John Healey said the leak was not revealed because of the risk that the Taliban authorities would obtain the data set and the lives of Afghans would be put at risk.
'Nobody has been arrested for their past actions, nobody has been killed and nobody is being monitored for that,' the Afghan government's deputy spokesman, Hamdullah Fitrat, told reporters Thursday.
'Reports of investigation and monitoring of a few people whose data has been leaked are false.'
After the Taliban swept back to power in 2021, their Supreme Leader Hibatullah Akhundzada announced an amnesty for Afghans who worked for NATO forces or the ousted foreign-backed government during the two-decade conflict.
'All their information and documents are present here in the Defence ministry, Interior ministry and Intelligence,' Fitrat added.
'We don't need to use the leaked documents from Britain.'
He said 'rumours' were being spread to create fear among Afghans and their families.

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