
As the US-led coalition fled the country in August 2021, the chaos outside Kabul airport intensified. Entire families gathered outside, hoping for a spot on an airlift, and more than 180 people in the crowd were killed in an Islamic State-led suicide attack.
An aid worker, Zemari Ahmadi, was later erroneously struck by an American drone two miles away, killing him and nine others. But as all this unfurled, email inboxes in Whitehall were clogged with a separate issue: dogs and cats.
The extent of this fixation can be revealed for the first time after hundreds of emails were released as part of an employment tribunal case brought by Josie Stewart, after her dismissal from the Foreign Office (FCDO) when she blew the whistle on a catalogue of failures about the Kabul withdrawal.
As part of her successful case against unfair dismissal, which yesterday was upheld by a panel of three judges, hundreds of secret and sensitive documents were disclosed during the hearing.
It was no surprise that government lawyers tried to hold the case behind closed doors, as it lifted the lid on questionable Whitehall decision-making.
Government emails about the animal charity Nowzad and its media-savvy founder, Pen Farthing, a former marine, ran to more than 250 pages. Stewart, who worked in the Afghanistan crisis team, lost her job after her security clearance was removed when a BBC journalist mistakenly revealed she was the source of leaked emails.
This story is from the February 19, 2025 edition of The Guardian.
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This story is from the February 19, 2025 edition of The Guardian.
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