The UK's foreign secretary says there are still hundreds of UK nationals in Afghanistan - days after the country's last evacuation flight left the capital Kabul.
Dominic Raab told BBC Breakfast those left behind - a figure in the "low hundreds" - were mainly the "more complex cases", such as large family groups or those without documentation.
On top of this, there are still others hoping to come to the UK because of their work with the British government, or through the resettlement scheme.
Raab stressed that the government is still hoping to evacuate everyone who is eligible, and has been in contact with third countries that could serve as a route to the UK.
On top of this, he said the government was "going to hold the Taliban to their assurances" that people would be allowed safe passage.
Raab also defended the two decades spent in Afghanistan, pointing to successes in access to education, maternal mortality and the fact the country had not been used as a base for terrorists in years.