Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Military will leave Kabul before Aug. 31: Sajjan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Aug, 2021 10:02 AM
  • Military will leave Kabul before Aug. 31: Sajjan

The Canadian military will begin wrapping up its mission at Kabul airport ahead of the Aug. 31 deadline the United States set for ending the mission, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said Wednesday.

Sajjan said that's because the U.S. is leading the mission and providing security and so its forces, some 6,000 personnel, must be the last to leave the airport. That means Canada's special forces and aircrews must begin departure preparations in advance.

Canada is using two C-17 transport planes to airlift Afghans to safety, and is one of 13 countries taking part in the airlift. It also has special forces operatives on the ground who are working outside the airport's confines to spirit fleeing Afghans to waiting flights.

"Drawing down a mission takes a considerable amount of time. It is not done overnight and it comes with considerable risk," Sajjan said, but he declined to give specific details.

"We remain dedicated to evacuating as many people as we can in the limited time we have left."

The pace of Canada's evacuation efforts has ramped up noticeably in the past three days with a flight on Monday carrying 506 people, about half of which were children and a record 535 on a flight out on Tuesday.

Sajjan was one of four ministers briefing journalists on the ongoing crisis in Afghanistan as the frantic effort continues to fully evacuate all foreign nationals and vulnerable Afghans who helped Canada, the U.S. and their NATO allies before the country's recent fall to the Taliban.

Immigration Minister Marco Mendicino said Canada's commitment to helping Afghans will go on after the military withdrawal from abroad.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his fellow G7 leaders were not able to persuade President Joe Biden to extend the American deadline for withdrawal at their virtual summit on Tuesday.

Foreign Affairs Minister Marc Garneau said the security situation keeps deteriorating.

Garneau said Canada and the G7 will be laying down markers for the Taliban in talks that will take place over the coming days to impress upon the regime that it must not block Afghans from leaving the country.

"We are working together to develop the necessary approach that we will take towards this Taliban regime in the coming days and to put down in front of them very important markers with respect to how they have to treat Afghans who want to leave the country," Garneau explained.

"There will be discussions with the Taliban; they are the regime that is in place in the country. And all of this will unfold in the coming days."

MORE National ARTICLES

Trudeau calls on Catholic Church to 'step up'

Trudeau calls on Catholic Church to 'step up'
Trudeau says as a Catholic he is deeply disappointed by the position that the church has taken now and over the past couple years. He notes that he personally asked the Pope in 2017 to consider an apology for the institution's part in the government-sponsored, church-run schools for Indigenous children that operated for more than 120 years.

Trudeau calls on Catholic Church to 'step up'

UN experts call for investigation into burial site

UN experts call for investigation into burial site
The United Nations' human-rights special rapporteurs are calling on Canada and the Catholic Church to conduct prompt and thorough investigations into the finding of an unmarked burial site believed to contain the remains of 215 Indigenous children at a British Columbia residential school.

UN experts call for investigation into burial site

Canada to get two million Pfizer doses per week

Canada to get two million Pfizer doses per week
Trudeau says that accounts for nine million Pfizer doses in July and another 9.1 million expected in August. He adds that Canada has also negotiated an option for three million more Pfizer doses to be delivered in September.

Canada to get two million Pfizer doses per week

A suspected impaired driver is in custody after crashing into a school bus.

A suspected impaired driver is in custody after crashing into a school bus.
The suspect driver is believed to have been impaired by drugs. The Burnaby RCMP will be recommending Motor Vehicle Act charges as well as criminal, impaired driving, drug trafficking and weapon possession charges.    

A suspected impaired driver is in custody after crashing into a school bus.

Economy lost 68,000 jobs in May: StatCan

Economy lost 68,000 jobs in May: StatCan
Statistics Canada says the economy lost 68,000 jobs in May as lockdowns to slow the spread of COVID-19 continued. The losses marked the second consecutive month of declines after 207,000 jobs were lost in April.

Economy lost 68,000 jobs in May: StatCan

'Reasonable effort' made to follow rules: Kenney

'Reasonable effort' made to follow rules: Kenney
Alberta Premier Jason Kenney says he and his ministers made every reasonable effort to comply with health rules during a surreptitiously photographed whiskey-drinks dinner on the patio of the infamous "Sky Palace."

'Reasonable effort' made to follow rules: Kenney