Horrifying video has emerged appearing to show the body of an Afghan man crushed to death in the landing gear of a flight out of Kabul on Monday amid a desperate rush to escape the country with the UK, US and other nations flying their citizens and some lucky Afghans to safety.
The footage appeared to have been taken from the rear porthole window of a C-17 military plane, showing a man's legs protruding from the right-hand wheel housing and flailing against the side of the aircraft in mid-flight.
American officials later confirmed that human remains had been found in the wheel arch of one of the planes, which had been bound for the US but diverted to a third country after declaring a state of emergency.
The shocking footage reveals the desperation of Afghans to flee from the Taliban, and comes after three people fell hundreds of feet to their deaths from a C-17 that had taken off from Kabul on Monday. Thousands of people had rushed the airport runway amid chaotic schemes trying to clamber on board plans, forcing evacuation flights to be suspended until today.
American troops have now secured the perimeter of the airport to allow evacuation flights to resume. Joe Biden - who pressed ahead with a deal struck by Donald Trump to rapidly pull troops out of the country - has been accused of 'humiliating' the US on the world stage, drawing comparison with the American retreat from Saigon.
There are at least 40,000 people who need evacuating from Afghanistan, including some 30,000 Americans and 6,000 Britons. Spain, France and India confirmed today that an unknown number of diplomatic staff had been flown out on Tuesday, while Russia and Indonesia said their embassies will be partially evacuated.
Germany and Poland have also said evacuation flights will be sent to the country, while dozens of other nations including the likes of Italy, South Korea and Canada are also expected to evacuate. China and Iran have held high-level talks about their own diplomatic missions in the country, but neither country has announced an evacuation.
America is hoping to fly out some 5,000 people per day and the UK 1,200 - though both managed just a few hundred on Monday, meaning the operation is likely to drag on for weeks, if not months.
Afghan security forces and government workers have joined thousands of diplomatic staff, visa holders and others who were promised sanctuary in trying to board planes out.
Meanwhile a second piece of footage showed racks of what appeared to be American and Soviet-made weaponry dumped alongside helmets, body armour and magazines full of ammunition in an arrivals area of the airport.An Indian airforce plane evacuated over 170 people from Kabul on Tuesday, including India's ambassador to Afghanistan, a government official said, as diplomats and civilians scrambled to get out of the country after the Taliban seized the capital.
The flight landed in the western Indian city of Jamnagar for refuelling on the way to Delhi, Jamnagar collector Sourabh Pardhi told Reuters.
Speaking to reporters, Ambassador Rudrendra Tandon said that nearly 200 personnel of the Indian mission in Afghanistan had been evacuated within three days, alongside Indian civilians working in the country.
'You cannot imagine how great it is to be back home,' Tandon said. 'We are back home safely, securely, without any accidents or harm to any of our people.'
Tandon described the situation in Afghanistan as 'fluid', adding that a small number of Indian nationals remained in the country who authorities were attempting to bring back.
Politicians in both the UK and US have urged their government to be 'generous' with granting asylum to Afghans who helped in the war effort, but there are fears that thousands will be left behind amid the chaos.
The success of the operation now depends upon troops being able to keep the runway open, and on officials being able to locate all those who have been promised a ticket home and get them to the airport.
Some 6,000 American troops have now encircled the airport, using barbed wire and armoured vehicles to keep people off the runway, but so has the Taliban - which now controls 90 per cent of the country.
While Taliban diplomats have promised that the evacuation will be allowed to go ahead unhindered, it remains unclear if they will be willing to let their countrymen leave, having urged people at the airport to return home and promised an amnesty for government workers who go back to their jobs.
Early on Tuesday, French soldiers were pictured standing guard alongside a military plane evacuating diplomatic staff and their Afghan colleagues.
People were pictured forming orderly queues to board the aircraft, in stark contrast to the panicked and desperate scenes just hours earlier
Despite the airport runway being secured, witnesses reported gunshots coming from the area overnight. Streets elsewhere in Kabul appeared calm.
U.S. forces took charge of the airport, their only way to fly out of the country, on Sunday, as the militants were winding up a dramatic week of advances across the country with their takeover of the capital without a fight.
Flights were suspended flights for much of Monday, when at least five people were killed, witnesses said, although it was unclear whether they had been shot or crushed in a stampede.
Media reported two people fell to their deaths from the underside of a U.S. military aircraft after it took off, crashing to their deaths on roofs of homes near the airport. More video showed three bodies being retrieved from the streets. A U.S. official told Reuters U.S. troops had killed two gunmen who had appeared to have fired into the crowd at the airport.
Despite the scenes of panic and confusion in Kabul, U.S. President Joe Biden defended his decision to withdraw U.S. forces after 20 years of war - the nation's longest - that he described as costing more than $1 trillion.
But a video on Monday of hundreds of desperate Afghans trying to clamber onto a U.S. military plane as it was about to take-off could haunt the United States, just as a photograph in 1975 of people scrambling to get on a helicopter on the roof of a building in Saigon became emblematic of the humiliating withdrawal from Vietnam.
Biden insisted he had to decide between asking U.S. forces to fight endlessly in what he called Afghanistan's civil war or follow through on an agreement to withdraw negotiated by his predecessor, Republican Donald Trump.
'I stand squarely behind my decision,' Biden said. 'After 20 years I've learned the hard way that there was never a good time to withdraw U.S. forces. That's why we're still there.'
Facing a barrage of criticism, from even his own diplomats, he blamed the Taliban's takeover on Afghan political leaders who fled and its army's unwillingness to fight.
The Taliban captured Afghanistan's biggest cities in days rather than the months predicted by U.S. intelligence, in many cases after demoralised government forces surrendered despite years of training and equipping by the United States and others.
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken that the hasty pullout of U.S. troops had a 'serious negative impact, ' China's state broadcaster CCTV reported, adding that Wang pledged to work with Washington to promote stability.
Blinken also spoke on Monday with counterparts in Pakistan, Russia, Britain, the European Union, Turkey and NATO about ensuring regional stability, the State Department said.
U.S. Charge d'Affaires Ross Wilson dismissed in a Twitter message what he called false reports that he had left the country, saying he and staff remained and were helping thousands of U.S. citizens and Afghans.
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani left the country on Sunday as the Islamist militants entered Kabul, saying he wanted to avoid bloodshed.
The U.N. Security Council called for talks to create a new government in Afghanistan after Secretary General Antonio Guterres warned of 'chilling' curbs on human rights and violations against women and girls.
Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai said she was 'deeply concerned' and called for world leaders to take urgent action. She urged Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan to op