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FLEEING HELL

Stampede at Kabul Airport leaves ‘five dead’ as thousands storm planes to flee Taliban

A STAMPEDE at Kabul Airport has left five people dead as thousands storm planes in a desperate bid to flee Afghanistan.

In chaotic scenes echoing the fall of Saigon at the end of the Vietnam war, petrified men, women and children were filmed trying to get on aircraft after the Taliban stormed the capital

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Desperate Afghanis climb stairs in a bid to get onto a plane at Kabul airport
A US helicopter swooping across the runway to clear a way for a plane to take off
Desperate Afghans running behind the plane to get on board
Afghan citizens are doing all they can to flee the countryCredit: Twitter
People waiting with suitcases near Kabul Airport's runway
Thousands stormed runways in desperate effort to get last flights outCredit: Twitter

Desperate people were filmed trying climb up a ladder to get on a plane while others were seen being pulled on board another aircraft.

One witness said he had seen the bodies of five people being taken to a vehicle at the airport.

Unverified reports and video claimed that two people had fallen several hundred feet to their deaths after being thrown from a C-17 transport aircraft taking off from Kabul airport.

US troops guarding the airport were forced to fire shots into the air but it's unclear if those who died were hit by bullets or crushed in the stampede.

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At one stage, US Apache helicopter gunships swooped down across a runway to clear desperate people trying to board a transport aircraft.

As the C-17 prepared to take off, hundreds of people were seen running behind it in an effort to get on board.

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Residents of Kabul today woke up to their first day under Taliban rule with reports the hardliners were scouring the city looking for military vehicles.

In a bid to flee what they fear will be a return to the Taliban's brutal rule based on an extreme interpretation of Islam, people raced to the airport in a frantic bid to board a flights.

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The stampede began on on Sunday night and daylight saw another wave of people swarm to the airport as the exodus continued

Another clip showed what were apparently US embassy staff attempting to flee by pulling each other into a plane while the ramp was being raised.

The shocking scenes in Kabul come as…

And a third video showed over a thousand citizens attempting to board a KamAir flight to Istanbul which can only carry 300 passengers.

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Footage showed people pushing and shoving as they make their way through the overpacked aisle of the plane which is already over capacity.

It comes as NATO has revealed that all commercial flights are now suspended from Kabul airport with only military aircraft now allowed to operate.

By Sunday night, members of the Taliban members declared that they had been "victorious" in a statement.

In the live broadcast one insurgent said he had spent eight years in Guantanamo Bay.

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Now Boris Johnson has blamed the US for the advancement of the Taliban in Afghanistan, claiming President Biden "accelerated" their control.

The Prime Minister said the "difficult" situation had been exacerbated by the President's decision to withdraw troops from the war-torn country.

Earlier today Afghan President Ashraf Ghani fled the country after the Taliban stormed the capital Kabul and seized his palace.

Mr Ghani later said he left to "prevent a flood of bloodshed".

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Ghani, who did not say where he had gone, said he believed "countless patriots would be martyred and the city of Kabul would be destroyed" if he had stayed behind.

Taliban fanatics have released 5,000 prisoners and taken control of Kabul as the government dramatically collapsed on Sunday.

People scrambling through barbed wire to get into the airportCredit: EPA
Daylight saw another stampede to get to planes
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Shocking video shows people pulling each other onto an aircraft as the ramp risesCredit: Twitter
Taliban fighters out on the streets of Kabul after taking controlCredit: AFP
Taliban fighters and locals sit on an Afghan National Army humvee vehicle in JalalabadCredit: AFP
Taliban fighters on the streets of KabulCredit: TWITTER/FURKAN
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It comes hours after the Taliban took control of Jalalabad and means they now have seized every city in the war-torn country.

Mr Johnson yesterday chaired an emergency Cobra meeting and recalled MPs to Parliament to tackle the crisis.

The speed of the Taliban's victory has shaken the world and came just weeks after troops from the US, UK and other Nato countries left Afghanistan.

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A few days ago US officials predicted it would take 30 days for the jihadis to reach Kabul - and 90 to take the city - but they have swept all before them in a terrifying rampage.

Twenty years after they were ejected by the US and its allies in the wake of 9/11 they stand on the brink of being back in power.

Tory MP Tom Tugendhat, chairman of the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee, described the Taliban victory "the biggest single foreign policy disaster" since Suez.

His colleague Johnny Mercer, who fought in the country, said it was "humiliating".

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