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ROS WYNNE JONES: 'Every Afghan hero deserves a UK passport. This country has failed them'

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We owed them our loyalty and their safety.

Thousands of brave Afghans who fought alongside British troops, translated for our officials, and worked for Britain before the Taliban swept back into power.

Instead – having abandoned their country in a dishonourable, chaotic retreat – it can now be revealed that we betrayed our Afghan allies once again. This time when a British military official accidentally disclosed the personal details of more than 33,000 people, putting them at risk of murderous reprisals.

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This scandal was covered up by the Conservative government while 18,500 Afghans whose data was compromised were flown to Britain as part of a peacetime evacuation mission. It was the right thing to do to avoid catastrophic loss of life. But, in the wake of disinformation following the Southport murders, men, women and children were then retraumatised by riots sweeping across the country where they had come to seek sanctuary.

These are people whose sacrifice has more than earned them a British passport. But instead of a thank you – the communities they were now living in faced petrol bombs, screaming crowds and their accommodation being set on fire in last summer’s riots.

During the worst outbreak of racial violence in the UK for decades, we now know areas with larger Afghan resettlement numbers were targeted. Even now, there are fears of copycat rioting greeting the news of the covert operation to bring these people to safety.

The smallest of the lessons we need to learn from this sorry tale is about keeping data safe. We need a new way forward for communities in our country, a properly funded, grown up political strategy that addresses the tensions and division the Tories encouraged to fester. The alternative is rule by a racist mob.

Thousands of Afghans have been living quietly in our country unable to tell their neighbours they had to come to the UK because our government put them in danger.

Today, the super-injunction protecting the story behind the Afghans’ secret evacuation has ended – and it is time for Britain to say sorry. Not just sorry for disclosing their identity. Not just sorry for abandoning their country and prioritising flights of dogs and cats while ministers were on a sun lounger.

But thank you for their courage and sacrifice – and sorry for the welcome we gave them.

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