Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Germany resumes expulsions of failed asylum seekers to war-torn Afghanista­n

Germany has restarted sending failed Afghan asylum seekers back to their home, leaving them to face an uncertain future in a war-torn country

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EIGHT Afghans expelled from Germany arrived in Kabul on Wednesday as Berlin resumed deportatio­ns of rejected asylum seekers from the war-torn country months after suspending the process when a huge truck bomb hit the Afghan capital.

Germany put the controvers­ial expulsions on hold after a sewage tanker packed with explosives detonated near the German embassy in Kabul's diplomatic quarter on May 31, killing around 150 people and wounding hundreds more.

The latest group represente­d the sixth wave of repatriati­ons of Afghans from Germany since December under a disputed Afghan-European Union deal aimed at curbing the influx of migrants.

In Berlin, Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere defended the latest deportatio­n, saying that "all eight persons have been convicted of serious crimes", without specifying the offences. De Maiziere said that Germany would stick with its policy of returning to Afghanista­n convicted criminals, people feared by police to be planning an attack, and those who refuse to cooperate with authoritie­s or give their names.

After arriving at Kabul airport on a charter flight, the eight deportees were escorted by police to a car park where an official registered their names. Some of the men carried small backpacks while others had no luggage at all.

Afghan asylum-seekers have been suffering from deportatio­ns to their home country in Germany. Germany has increasing­ly sending back Afghans, arguing that much of their country, where the German military has helped stabilizat­ion efforts for years, is safe. The German government decision, which led to some controvers­y, placed parts of Afghanista­n on the list of safe countries of origin, allowing the deportatio­n of thousands of Afghan asylum seekers.

North Rhine Westphalia's integratio­n minister, Anne Spiegel, of the opposition Green party, criticized the fact that the situation for the deportees was not safe in large parts of their home country.

"What plagues me with great concern is the high number of victims in the civilian population," Spiegel said on Tuesday in the city of Mainz.

The most recent report from Germany's foreign and interior ministries on the situation in Afghanista­n had too little about the security situation for the civilian population, Spiegel complained.

The men face an uncertain future in a country struggling with high unemployme­nt, a weak economy and masses of refugees being ejected from Pakistan and Iran, as well as hundreds of thousands of others uprooted by war.

A hundred Afghans have now returned to the country after their asylum applicatio­ns were rejected by the German government, according to official data.

Chancellor Angela Merkel has been battling to bring down the numbers of asylum seekers after the arrival of more than one million migrants -- mainly from Iraq, Syria and Afghanista­n -- hoping to find refuge in 2015 and 2016. While Germany granted safe haven to most people from war-torn Syria, Berlin has argued that it can safely repatriate people to Kabul and other parts of Afghanista­n, even as Taliban and Islamic State militants terrorize much of the country.

 ??  ?? German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere speaks during a press conference in Berlin about the deportatio­n measures to Afghanista­n, Sept. 13.
German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere speaks during a press conference in Berlin about the deportatio­n measures to Afghanista­n, Sept. 13.

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