The publishers of three major U.S. newspapers asked President Joe Biden on Monday to help Afghan colleagues of their journalists evacuate Afghanistan.
CNBC reports the requests from The New York Times, Washington Post, and Wall Street Journal came after they pleaded with the White House to move to safety more than 200 journalists and related people affiliated with the papers who are “in danger” at the Kabul airport.
Post Publisher Fred Ryan asked national security advisor Jake Sullivan in an “urgent request” email to have them moved from the civilian side of Hamid Karzai International Airport “to the military side where they can be safe as they await evacuation flights.”
“They are currently in danger and need the US government to get them to safety,” Ryan wrote in the email, which he said he was writing on behalf of the three newspapers.
Ryan wrote that there are 204 journalists, support staff and family members from the three newspapers who are stuck on the civilian side of the airport.
Later Monday, Ryan, Times Publisher A.G. Sulzberger and Journal Publisher Almar Latour sent Biden a joint letter urging him to help get Afghan colleagues associated with the papers out of the country.
“For the past twenty years, brave Afghan colleagues have worked tirelessly to help The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal share news and information from the region with the global public,” the letter said.
“Now, those colleagues and their families are trapped in Kabul, their lives in peril.”
Thousands of Afghans swarmed the tarmac of the airport Monday after the Taliban captured the capital, Kabul.
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