A British 'danger tourist' who took a holiday to Kabul two days before the Taliban seized the city is 'exhausted but relieved' after landing in Dubai aboard a military plane carrying hundreds of evacuees
Miles Routledge, 21, few into the Afghan capital from Istanbul on Friday, when advancing militants were closing in on the city having already captured key districts of Kandahar and Lashkar Gah.
This morning, the student shared on Facebook a selfie video taken while seated aboard a packed evacuation aircraft - which he described as being operated by the British Army - as it touched down in the UAE.
As part of the evacuation operation, some evacuees are being taken to cities in the Middle East before boarding commercial charter flights back home.
The Birmingham banking intern, who has boasted of visiting Chernobyl, is seen wearing a flak jacket in the video, and wrote in an accompanying caption: 'I've landed in Dubai thanks to the brilliant people at the British Army. All safe!'
Mr Routledge earlier claimed he had been put under UN protection following the Taliban's invasion of Kabul, but a UN spokesman has been unable to confirm this. Today, the student told BBC News that he was 'exhausted but relieved' to have escaped Kabul.
His exploits have provoked fury as thousands of refugees, including brave British Army translators, desperately scrabble for space on the few flights leaving Afghanistan to avoid being killed by Taliban fighters.
Beneath one Facebook post another user wrote: 'Selfish actions, your seat on a plane home should have been given to an Afghan interpreter who now faces certain death.'
The UK's evacuation effort - codenamed called Operation PITTING - is helping British citizens and Afghans entitled to a British visa, including Army translators. An official at Kabul airport said three British military flights had so far left today, among a total of 12 military airlifts from different nations.
Britain's evacuation operation is being overseen by members of the Army's 16 Air Assault Brigade, working with RAF pilots and using UK bases including Brize Norton in Oxfordshire. A total of 370 people were flown back home yesterday and the day before, Sky News today reported.
Vice Adm Sir Ben Key, in charge of the UK's operation, said he believes the British military can get between 6,000-7,000 people out. He said he was confident the airfield in Kabul was 'stable' but added that the 'dynamic political situation' in city meant the evacuation 'can't afford to pause', adding that officials were 'alive to the uncertainty'.
MailOnline has contacted the Ministry of Defence to confirm if Mr Routledge was travelling on a British military flight. Flight data suggests British military planes involved in the evacuation include RAF Voyagers and a series of other transport aircraft including the Boeing C-17 Globemaster III, Lockheed C-130 Hercules and Airbus A400M Atlas.
There are at least 56,000 people who need evacuating from Afghanistan - including some 22,000 flying on US special immigrant visas, 4,000 British nationals, 10,000 refugees that Germany has said it will accept, and 20,000 bound for Canada.
In reality, that number is likely to be far higher once diplomatic staff from dozens of countries, which had relations with Afghanistan's former government are taken into account.
Mr Routledge had earlier posted a series of photos on streaming site Twitch of his apparent trip around the war-torn country.
The Loughborough physics student announced yesterday that he had eventually secured an evacuation flight.
Mr Routledge wrote on Facebook: 'Got Evacuated at 4ish (it's 2am now) with 100 or so other civilians, couldn't message as there were cars emitting signals that would set off bombs, it blocked my airpods from connecting so I think it blocked all wifi/data.
'The Taliban let us go through the airport and we met many of them, very long transition period but everyone was smiling and waving at one another, some took selfies with them. I slept on a dirt/gravel road and woke up as cars went by. We're in a new safe house and we're all hydrated, happy and ready for a few hours of sleep.'
Shortly after he posted an update saying: 'On the flight out we aren't allowed any liquids at all, no razors and only 1 bag up to 10kg so everyone is tossing all their belongings into a pile.
'People are donating each other their items because they can't carry them. Some lads stuffed my body armour and bag with protein bars, over 20 of them. Very happy man (right now). Thank you lads.'
His mother Susan was distraught when approached at the family home in Sutton Coldfield yesterday.
Mrs Routledge told The Sun Online she had urgently been awaiting a call from the Foreign Office to discover whether her son would be kept safe amid the Taliban's takeover of Kabul.
Her son had previously bragged of visiting Chernobyl, posting pictures in May saying it was two years since he visited the scene of the 1986 nuclear disaster in Ukraine.
In online posts under his name he apparently claimed to have been quizzed by armed Taliban militants while on his way to Kabul International Airport.
They apparently asked him where he was from - to which he said Wales. He claims the fighters did not know where Wales was, and let him go. Mr Routledge said he later came across another armed convoy during the Taliban insurgency and took a selfie on one of their gun emplacements.
Mr Routledge has subsequently claimed messages posted under his name on messaging site 4chan were fake.
Speaking to the Times, he claimed he made the decision to visit Afghanistan after watching tourism videos on YouTube. He said that when the takeover began, he could not refund his flights so chose to travel instead.
Mr Routledge also said he had accepted the possibility that he might die in Afghanistan. In a message addressed to friends on social media, he apparently wrote: 'I've bitten off more than I can chew and something has not gone to plan resulting in this situation.
'There was no convincing me otherwise and I knew the risks, it was a gamble I took that went wrong despite my confidence and jokes.'
Yesterday he told viewers: 'I was fully prepared for death, I accepted it. This trip has been a test of God. I'm very religious so I believe I'll be looked after.
'Before I left I wrote a letter to my friends saying that if I died, not to feel guilty, that I would die happy and religious and proud.'
He said that he would be safe because of a £15 joke purchase he made which gave him the right to use the title 'Lord', seen on his American Express card.
The student told his followers: 'The Taliban may see that as reason enough to keep me alive, thinking it may hold some negotiating power as they'll think I'm important. Let's hope it won't get to that stage though.'
MailOnline has contacted the British Foreign Office and the UN for comment.
Today hundreds of Afghanis fleeing the Taliban were lined up behind barbed wire at Kabul airport and forced to wait for rescue - after a desperate rush to board evacuation flights yesterday saw one person crushed to death in the wheel housing of an aircraft and three others fall from the sky.
Dozens of people - some clutching immigration documents - formed orderly queues under the noses of Afghan security guards and foreign troops at Hamid Karzai airport on Tuesday as they waited to board military flights out of the country, fearing bloody reprisal by the Islamists.
It was a far cry from the pandemonium which broke out on Monday as thousands of desperate people rushed the runway and clung to the wheels of departing US jets - with horrifying video appearing to show how one man was crushed to death in the landing gear of a C-17 transport plane.
The footage, which emerged today, shows what appears to be a man's legs protruding from the side of the jet and failing against the side of the aircraft. A US official later confirmed that human remain were found in the landing gear of a jet, which made an emergency landing after declaring a mid-air state of emergency.
The US has said it may issue up 80,000 special immigrant visas to those who helped with combat operations and are likely to face revenge attacks from the Taliban, while 7,500 troops currently guarding the airport - including 6,000 Americans and smaller numbers of British, Turkish and Australians - will also need to leave.
At least 6,000 people have already managed to flee the country on evacuation flights that began Sunday, with a dozen departing on Tuesday - most of them flying to neighbouring Middle Eastern countries before continuing their journeys west. Spain, France and India confirmed their diplomatic staff had been evacuated today.
Joe Biden has been slammed over the hasty withdrawal which critics said has 'humiliated' the US on the world stage and drew comparisons with the retreat from Saigon at the end of the Vietnam war.
Source: Dailymail
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