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Germany is deporting about 30 men to Afghanistan

Germany is deporting about 30 men to Afghanistan
Several German states had registered Afghans for the flight. / Photo: Hendrik Schmidt/dpa
From: DieSachsen News
Another deportation flight is set to depart from Leipzig/Halle for Kabul. This is based on an agreement with the Islamist Taliban, who are in power there.

According to the German Press Agency, Germany has once again deported Afghans to their home country via a charter flight. Among the deported men were criminals who had been convicted of crimes including rape, manslaughter, and sexual assault. North Rhine-Westphalia, Schleswig-Holstein, Bavaria, Lower Saxony, and Baden-Württemberg had registered around 30 individuals subject to deportation for the flight.

According to reports, the plane took off from Leipzig/Halle Airport during the night, bound for the Afghan capital Kabul. According to a dpa reporter on the scene, around 35 opponents of the deportation gathered in the terminal for a vigil.

The basis for this is a direct agreement with the Islamist Taliban ruling Afghanistan, which allows the German government to carry out regular deportations to Afghanistan without intermediary states.

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First deportation flight of 2024

A mass deportation of men required to leave the country to Afghanistan, originally scheduled for late May, was recently canceled because the Taliban rulers refused to cooperate. According to dpa reports, the flight was canceled after the militant Islamist de facto rulers in Kabul expressed dissatisfaction with what they viewed as a lack of willingness to engage in dialogue on the part of representatives from the German Foreign Office. The Taliban are primarily interested in sending more diplomats to the Afghan missions in Germany.

In August 2024, for the first time since the Taliban took power three years earlier, 28 male offenders were deported from Leipzig to Kabul with the help of Qatar. Meanwhile, Germany has resumed organizing deportations to Afghanistan on its own—both individual deportations via scheduled flights and group charter flights. 

Criticism of concessions to the Taliban

Critics complain that while the German government does not recognize the Taliban due to their human rights violations—particularly regarding women—it simultaneously makes practical concessions to enable deportations. This includes permission to send individual diplomats to the Afghan missions in Germany, where previously only diplomats who had been sent there by the previous government had worked. 

Federal Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt (CSU) stated in November: “Criminals and individuals posing a threat must be given priority.” However, this does not mean that deportations will be limited exclusively to these two groups in the future.

Copyright 2026, dpa (www.dpa.de). All rights reserved

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