American rescue clinic founder stays in Afghanistan to pursue evacuation for employees and animals left powering
This story has been corrected.
Charlotte Maxwell-Jones poses with a rescue dog at Kabul’s airport on Aug. 29, 2021.

Charlotte Maxwell-Jones poses with a rescue canine at Kabul’s airport on Aug. 29, 2021. (Facebook/Charlotte Maxwell-Jones)

An American who founded an animal rescue clinic in Kabul is nevertheless in Afghanistan, making an attempt to persuade the Taliban to allow her retrieve animals launched by the U.S. navy and airlift them out of the place with the clinic’s workforce.

Charlotte Maxwell-Jones was not able to board a armed forces evacuation flight with the animals or charter a non-public plane ahead of international troops still left earlier this 7 days.

The U.S. armed forces produced the clinic’s animals from their cages in an enclosed area at the Kabul airport that had formerly been employed by the previous Afghan military, Maxwell-Jones and a Pentagon statement said.

Maxwell-Jones launched Kabul Smaller Animal Rescue in 2018 to rescue strays, provide veterinary solutions and help ship animals overseas for adoption. American

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