Issued on:
The United Arab Emirates has set up an air bridge to deliver tons of aid to Afghanistan after the Taliban takeover, a Kabul airport operations manager told AFP on Saturday, while Pakistan International Airlines said it would relaunch commercial flights to the Afghan capital starting Monday.
The wealthy UAE, a close US ally, is one of a number of Gulf states that have been key staging posts for evacuation flights for foreigners and Afghans, alongside Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain.
“From the 3rd of September, (…) the UAE government has activated an air bridge corridor for humanitarian aid,” said Ibrahim Moarafi.
Moarafi is general manager and regional director of GAAC, a UAE-based company that has provided ground and security handling services at Kabul airport since November 2020.
“From that day and until now, we have received and handled 11 flights almost on a daily basis, and we have handled 255 tonnes of medical aid and food items,” he said.
On Saturday, two UAE aircraft unloaded dozens of aid packages containing roast minced veal, powdered milk, cooking oil and medical supplies, an AFP correspondent said.
More than two thirds of the 120,000 Afghans and foreigners who fled Afghanistan on evacuation flights landed in the UAE and Qatar before going on to their final destinations.
Qatar hosts the largest US air force base in the region and has been the main intermediary between the Taliban and the international community.
>> Analysis: Qatar emerges as central player in West’s relationship with Afghanistan
Numerous countries, including the United States, have relocated their embassies from Kabul to Doha since the Taliban took over Afghanistan’s capital on August 15.
The UAE was one of only three countries to recognise Taliban rule between 1996 and 2001. It currently hosts ousted president Ashraf Ghani who…