Germany receives 10,000 refugees from Afghanistan, Canada 20 thousand and the United States 80 thousand.

Hundreds of Afghans were in line today behind thorns at Kabul Airport for evacuation flights as the order seems to have been restored after the frightening scenes of yesterday's chaos. At today's published sight, a person caught on flying wheels is believed to have been printed to death because [...]
Hundreds of Afghans were in line today behind thorns at Kabul Airport for evacuation flights as the order seems to have been restored after the frightening scenes of yesterday's chaos.
At today's published sight, a person caught on flying wheels is believed to have been shot to death because three more people flew from the altitude yesterday.
Tens of people, many of whom were pressed into hands, held regular lines in front of Afghan armed guards as the Apache helicopters flew around the airport Had Karzai in Kabul.
Today's developments were a very different scene from yesterday's uncontrolled chaos that cost the lives of at least seven people. In the video published today, a man appeared to have been shot to death by the seating vehicles of the plane while being caught on the wheels of the C-17 transporter trying to escape the country.
It is estimated that there are about 56,000 people seeking to evacuate from Afghanistan, including 22,000 who own American visas, 4,000 British citizens.
10,000 refugees have been accepted by Germany, and 20,000 are accepted by Canada. But numbers are expected to increase even more.
The US has said it will accept 80,000 special visa migrants who have helped their military operations there, who face the fear of retaliation by the Taliban. Washington still has 7,500 troops defending the airport, while so far around 6,000 US citizens have been evacuated.
Today they confirmed the evacuation of diplomatic staff Spain, France and India.
Russia and Indonesia will evacuate only part of the staff, while the EU diplomatic mission led by Andreas Von Brandt is still in place and expects to leave.
Turkey has said it welcomes positive messages from the new Taliban government and says it will hold talks.












