Dozens of dogs found at Kabul International Airport after the U.S. evacuation of Afghanistan are training with a security employees.Photo: KARIM SAHIB/AFP via Getty

Afghanistan dogs

More than two dozen Afghan dogs stranded amid last month’s evacuations reportedly have a new home, new handlers and are being given new responsibilities.

Hewad Azizi, who works for a security company at the Kabul International Airport,told the AFPthat he and his colleagues are now feeding, housing and working with 30 dogs at a training facility on the airport grounds.

Images of dogs allegedly left behind in and around the Kabul airport prompted accusations of abandonment — but the Department of Defensesaid any reportsabout the U.S. forces leaving military animals behind were “erroneous.”

A Pentagon spokesman told PEOPLE in August: “Our military working dogs were safely evacuated.”

Rather, it seemed, the dogs belonged to contractors or other groups who were seeking to flee.

Handlers say the dogs in their care are skilled in detecting drugs and explosives.KARIM SAHIB/AFP via Getty

Afghanistan dogs

Azizi and his colleagues are unsure who was previously responsible for the dogs, AFP reports. The focus is now on caring for the animals and putting them to work in airport security operations according to their skill sets.

“We have done training with them to find out what they are used for exactly,” Azizi said, adding that some of the dogs were trained to detect bombs.

Azizi said his favorite dog is a dark brown Malinois named Rex who is now practicing sniffing out boxes that smell like explosive devices on the grounds of the airport. When Rex returns successfully with the fake bomb, he gets to play with a ball as a reward.

A Pentagon spokesman previously told PEOPLE that U.S. military dogs were safely evacuated.KARIM SAHIB/AFP via Getty

Afghanistan dogs

“We have different dogs here. Narcotic dogs or drug dogs and explosive or bomb dogs,” K9 supervisor Mohamad Mourid said in anAFP video posted on Twitter.

“We’re training with different materials with them. Now we keep them here,” Mourid said. “We look, we train, we see how we can use them on the ground.”

source: people.com