
Taliban warns thousands of Afghans secretly airlifted to UK ‘we will HUNT you down' after MoD leaked ‘kill list'
fleeing the
terrorist organisation
were leaked after a Royal Marine mistakenly sent a top secret email to the wrong people.
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Details of almost 20,000 Afghan refugees fleeing the terrorist organisation were leaked
Credit: AFP
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Afghan refugees leaving Kabul in 2021
Credit: PA
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The list contained details of 20,000 Afghans whose country had been taken over by the Taliban
Credit: Getty
Thousands of the refugees had to be secretly relocated to the UK after the blunder, which was covered up by the Ministry of Defence and is set to cost Britain up to £7 billion.
The majority of those on the secret list were flown into Stansted airport via unmarked planes.
But now Taliban officials have claimed the details of all the refugees have been known to them since 2022, after they allegedly sourced the information from the internet.
Speaking to
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'We've been calling and visiting their family members to track them down.
'They believe these individuals are still working with the British, and say the problem must be dealt with.
'These people are seen as traitors, and the plan has been to find as many of them as possible.
'Whoever leaked that file is actually helping us. There may be a general amnesty in place, but spies cannot escape justice.'
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It means that the clumsy click and the subsequent cover-up - which has now proven to be ineffective - has potential to be the most expensive data breach in history.
The list also included names of their individual UK sponsors including SAS and MI6 spies and at least one
Although Defence Secretary
Defence Secretary Healey's figure includes £100 million in compensation for the data breach and £300 million to relocate them to Britain.
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Taliban launches warped Afghan TOURISM campaign with vid of brutes posing beside 'hostage' in ISIS-style mock execution
Mr Healey offered a "sincere apology" in the face of the huge error and added that "no government wishes to withhold information from the British public".
He later said: "The full number of Afghan arrivals under all schemes have been reported in the regular Home Office statistics, meaning that they are already counted in the existing migration figures."
However, government sources have estimated that the lifetime cost of supporting the 20,000 individuals and their families could hit £7 billion - if the rescued Afghans decide to sue the government for leaking their data.
Only around 10 to 15 per cent of the individuals on the list would have qualified for relocation under the emergency Afghan Relocation and Assistance Programme, known as ARAP, opened as Kabul fell to the
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Many of the Afghans who were flown into the country as part of Operation Rubific were initially housed at MoD homes or hotels until permanent accomodation was found.
The leak put countless of people left in Afghanistan at risk, as the country's ruthless Taliban rulers tried to hunt and kill anyone who had helped UK forces.
A number of named individuals have been killed since the leak. Others were tortured and beaten.
But sources insisted it was impossible to prove conclusively whether it was a direct result of the data breach.
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The epic MoD blunder was kept Top Secret for almost three years by a legal super injunction but can finally be made public today.
A source said: 'The
kept this secret and denied these people the chance to change their numbers, emails, locations or take any measures to protect themselves.'
And the MoD only wrote to those affected to warn them today.
An MoD source said it was 'human error and not a cyber hack or hostile state actor'.
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Thousands of Afghan refugees have been marked on a 'kill list'
Credit: Reuters
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Defence Secretary John Healey offered a "sincere apology" after the huge error
Credit: PA
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The leak, covered up by the MoD, cost Britain £7 billion after it was sent to the wrong people
Credit: Getty Images
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Irish Times
5 hours ago
- Irish Times
The Irish Times view on the UK Afghan controversy: an unacceptable precedent
The advice Harold Macmillan gave to Alex Douglas-Home in 1963 not to invade Afghanistan is worth recalling in the aftermath of revelations that the names of 25,000 Afghanis who cooperated with the British there from 2001 to 2021 were leaked, endangering them and their relatives. The British state's extraordinary measures to keep the leak secret and relocate many of them to Britain highlight the sensitivity of the issue and vulnerability of those involved. It is part of a much larger story about Afghanistan's troubles since the Taliban took power four years ago. The British decision to invade in 2001, along with US forces, was followed by a chaotic withdrawal in 2021 when the Biden administration pulled out. That left their many Afghani collaborators vulnerable to arrest and torture, alongside the many more – women especially – targeted by the new regime. Millions of Afghan refugees in neighbouring Iran and Pakistan are being expelled back home to a country of 41 million people that can ill afford to receive them. That Afghan refugees outnumber most others on the boats from France to Britain echoes this wider suffering. It is a reminder of the continuing truth contained in the remark about migration to Britain by the Sri Lankan-British writer Ambalavaner Sivanandan: 'We are here because you were there'. Afghans have shared in the racist abuse heaped on migrants in recent times, stoked by populist right-wing movements. Fears that such sentiments would be further inflamed by news of the relocations and their cost prompted the clampdown on media coverage and sworn secrecy of state personnel when the leak was discovered in 2023. The Labour government has relaxed this after a court hearing, reduced the cost estimate and discontinued much of the transfer programme. Their efforts to blame the previous Conservative government for the fiasco should not disguise the role of the British state. Its resort to unprecedented clampdowns on media reporting set an unacceptable precedent at a time of declining trust in democracy.


Extra.ie
5 hours ago
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Community 'safety' group includes violent offenders and killer as members
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He pleaded not guilty to murder but guilty to the manslaughter of Joseph 'Joey' O'Donnell, 48 at Hyde Road, Prospect, in Limerick, on October 1, 2010. Joseph O'Donnell died in hospital from blunt force trauma to the head, hours after his son had kicked and beaten him with a number of household items and a full can of beer. Last week, revealed how a Muslim man was hospitalised with a broken jaw after convicted killer McNamara, who is involved in the far-right 'community watchdog' group, wrongly accused him of inappropriately approaching children in a park. The footage, which went viral on social media before it was labelled 'misinformation' by gardaí, was filmed by McNamara and posted to his TikTok account. McNamara has also addressed his criminal past in a video he posted to his TikTok account. In the video, he claimed he had no idea why people are commenting under his posts that he was a murderer and that he didn't want to have to 'lower himself' by explaining to people what actually happened. He said: 'Who never had a drink with someone, got in a row and hit him in the head?' He added: 'He died three days later. I got charged with manslaughter. He's my dad. I love him. I miss him.' He also doubled down on the video he posted about the man in the park, saying there is 'evidence' of 'this Muslim foreign fella' approaching children – but without providing any proof or evidence to back up his claim. Sinne na Daoine publicised their first and second 'patrols' in Limerick city and Clonmel, in Co. Tipperary, on social media earlier in the year. They have also listed the names of companies or people they label 'plantation enablers' on their website. Meanwhile, Martin Murphy previously attempted to downplay his threatening posts when contacted by us. 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Extra.ie
9 hours ago
- Extra.ie
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