Afghan girl footballers reach UK on Kim Kardashian West-funded flight
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A group of Afghan girl footballers have flown into the UK,
the culmination of an extraordinary rescue effort that began after the Taliban
seized power.
The costly operation brought together an unlikely cast of
characters, from Muslim sports-people to spies, philanthropists, and a Hasidic
rabbi.
The girls - aged between 13 and 19 - arrived from Pakistan
overnight.
Their flight was chartered by a Jewish aid organisation and
was paid for by the US star, Kim Kardashian-West.
"It's Mission Accomplished," said Khalida Popal,
former manager of Afghanistan's national women's team, who co-ordinated their
rescue from Denmark. "I'm so happy and so proud of these girls. They were
traumatised. They've been through so much and managed to stay strong. Now they
can start a new life and breathe freedom."
Rabbi Moshe Margaretten, President & Founder of the
Jewish aid group, the Tzedek Association, expressed his relief. "As the
son and grandson of Holocaust survivors, a time when righteous non-Jewish
people stepped up to the plate to help save so many Jewish people, I know in my
heart that we must be there for others in their time of need at a time when
their very lives are at risk," he said.
The teenagers, mostly from the Afghan provinces, all feared
for their lives when the Taliban captured their cities. Some of their families
had received death threats.
"People were searching houses for them" Ms Popal
told the BBC.
Terrified, they made their way to Kabul and were due to be evacuated to the Gulf state of Qatar at the end of August.
They were almost within sight of the airport when they were
pulled off their buses because of security warnings. Two hours later, the
airport was struck by a suicide bomb, killing more than 180 people.
So they went into hiding.
10 days later, following intense lobbying on their behalf,
they were given the personal permission of the Pakistani Prime Minister, Imran
Khan, to cross the border.
But they only had temporary Pakistani visas.
With the clock ticking, a frantic effort to find them a new
home began.
The girls had the support of Leeds United Football club
chairman Andrea Radrizzani. They also had the ear of the UK government -
through a chain of former interpreters for the British military and influential
veterans. Last month, they were granted visas.
But they still needed funding to get them on a flight.
Reality TV star Kim Kardashian-West and her shapewear company SKIMS agreed to
cover the costs.
A charter was organised, which flew the group of 130 people
into Stansted airport last night. They are due to spend the next 10 days in
quarantine.
"We've achieved our first goal," Khalida Popal
told the BBC. "The next goal is to work with footballing organisations to
help them start new careers in football."
"So many people were involved," Ms Popal said.
"It's the hardest thing I've done in my life."
In separate rescue missions, the women's national team was
flown to Australia as part of the mass Western evacuation in August. And
members of Afghanistan girls' team were given asylum in Portugal.
But dozens of young Afghan female footballers remain stuck
in Afghanistan, desperate for a way out.
Source BBC
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