U.S. bars flight from landing with Americans from Kabul - activists
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[September 29, 2021]
By Jonathan Landay
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Department of
Homeland Security on Tuesday denied U.S. landing rights for a charter
plane carrying more than 100 Americans and U.S. green card holders
evacuated from Afghanistan, organizers of the flight said.
"They will not allow a charter on an international flight into a U.S.
port of entry," Bryan Stern, a founder of non-profit group Project
Dynamo, said of the department's Customs and Border Protection agency.
Stern spoke to Reuters from aboard a plane his group chartered from Kam
Air, a private Afghan airline, that he said had been sitting for 14
hours at Abu Dhabi airport after arriving from Kabul with 117 people,
including 59 children.
His group is one of several that emerged from ad hoc networks of U.S.
military veterans, current and former U.S. officials and others that
formed to bolster last month's U.S. evacuation operation they saw as
chaotic and badly organized.
DHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
An administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said
they were unfamiliar with the matter, but that the U.S. government
typically takes time to verify the manifests of charter planes before
clearing them to land in the United States.
U.S. President Joe Biden's administration has said its top priority is
repatriating Americans and green card holders unable to leave
Afghanistan in the U.S. evacuation operation last month.
A senior State Department official on Monday said the United States was
aware of about 100 American citizens and legal permanent residents ready
to leave Afghanistan.
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U.S. Department of Homeland Security emblem is pictured at the
National Cybersecurity & Communications Integration Center (NCCIC)
located just outside Washington in Arlington, Virginia September 24,
2010. REUTERS/Hyungwon Kang/
Twenty-eight Americans, 83 green card holders and six
people with U.S. Special Immigration Visas granted to Afghans who
worked for the U.S. government during the 20-year war in Afghanistan
were aboard the Kam Air flight, Stern said.
He had planned to transfer the passengers to a chartered Ethiopian
Airlines plane for an onward flight to the United States that he
said the Customs cleared to land at John F. Kennedy International
Airport in New York City.
Customs then changed the clearance to Dulles International Airport
outside Washington before denying the plane landing rights anywhere
in the United States, he said.
"I have a big, beautiful, giant, humongous Boeing 787 that I can see
parked in front of us," he said. "I have crew. I have food."
Stern said intermediaries in Kabul had obtained permission from the
Taliban-run Afghan Civil Aviation Authority for the groups to send a
charter flight to retrieve the passengers from Kabul airport.
(Reporting by Jonathan Landay; Editing by Scott Malone and Stephen
Coates)
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