German govt sued over Afghan refugees deported from Pakistan

Afghan refugees wait in a queue to cross the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in Torkham on October 27, 2023. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 15 August 2025
Follow

German govt sued over Afghan refugees deported from Pakistan

  • Pakistan’s deportation drive leaves Afghans in German asylum scheme fearing persecution at home
  • Immigration curbs under Chancellor Merz leave 2,000 Afghans in Pakistan waiting for German visas

BERLIN: German rights groups took to the courts Friday on behalf of Afghans who were offered refuge by Berlin but are now caught between Chancellor Friedrich Merz's immigration crackdown and a wave of deportations from Pakistan.
Refugee support groups filed cases against Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul and Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt, accusing them of "abandonment and failure to render assistance" to Afghans who were previously promised asylum in Germany.

The group Pro Asyl said Pakistan had detained hundreds of Afghans this week in an escalating series of arrests and deported 34, placing them at risk of "arbitrary imprisonment, mistreatment or even execution" in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan.

"We came to Pakistan one year ago because of the promise of the German government," a 27-year-old Afghan women's rights activist told AFP, asking not to be named for security reasons.

"In the last few days that the police have been searching for us, my children and I have become sick," said the mother-of-two, who added that she was "terrified and anxious" after several friends were arrested.

She and her family are among thousands of Afghans whom Germany offered to take in under a scheme set up under former chancellor Olaf Scholz in the wake of the Taliban's 2021 takeover.

It offered asylum to Afghans who had worked with German institutions or who were particularly threatened by the Taliban, including journalists and human rights activists, as well as their families.

However, the program has been put on hold as part of a stricter immigration policy brought in under conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who took office in May.

This has left around 2,000 Afghans stranded in Pakistan waiting for visas to travel to Germany.

"I am worried that if the police arrest us, they will hand us over straight away to the Taliban, and then my identity will be revealed to them and I couldn't imagine what they will do to me and my family," said the Afghan activist. "I am devastated."

The Kabul Airbridge initiative, which aims to help those stuck in Pakistan, said that another 270 Afghans who had been accepted under the German scheme faced being deported on Friday and that at least four more guesthouses had been raided.

The group said that while there had been previous cases of Afghans in the scheme being deported, the raids over the past few days were of a "different order of magnitude."

According to Kabul Airbridge, the German government and the GIZ development agency have previously managed to stop deportations but it was far from certain they could do so now given the numbers involved.

Pakistan first launched a deportation drive in 2023 and renewed it in April when it rescinded hundreds of thousands of residence permits for Afghans, threatening to arrest those who did not leave.

Many Afghans have braved the heat and monsoon rains in parks, terrified of being swept up in the arrests.

Wadephul, in a statement marking the fourth anniversary of the Taliban's return to power, voiced "deep concern" over the fate of those at risk of deportation and said Germany was making representations for them with Pakistani authorities "at the highest level."

However, Berlin has continued to keep the admissions program on ice, despite a court ruling last month which found that it had a "legally binding commitment" to give visas to those who had been accepted under the program.

Immigration has been a hot-button topic in Europe's biggest economy, pushed strongly by the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.

A string of violent attacks committed by foreign nationals, including Afghans, before February's election led Merz to tighten borders, promise to end the admissions scheme and to increase deportations of convicted criminals to Afghanistan and elsewhere.

Those in limbo in Pakistan do not understand why they have to pay the price, among them a 33-year-old man who worked with the Germans in Afghanistan for three years on humanitarian projects.

"We did not expect to be rewarded with this after working for Germany's goals," he told AFP, saying that he, his wife and their three children, after waiting in Pakistan for over a year, had been left in "panic and anxiety" by the police raids.

"We fled from darkness, violence, injustice and oppression, now we are treated this way."


Pakistan says Indonesia’s Pertamina exploring cooperation in ‘vast untapped potential’ in minerals 

Updated 6 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan says Indonesia’s Pertamina exploring cooperation in ‘vast untapped potential’ in minerals 

  • Islamabad is pitching its largely untapped mineral sector to foreign investors as a new pillar of economic recovery and industrial growth
  • Jakarta is eyeing overseas mining partnerships through Pertamina to leverage its exploration expertise and secure strategic raw materials

ISLAMABAD: Indonesia has expressed interest in engaging in Pakistan’s largely untapped mineral sector, with Jakarta’s state-owned energy company Pertamina seen as a potential partner for exploration and mining cooperation, a statement from Pakistan’s Information Ministry said this week.

The engagement comes as Pakistan positions mining as a potential engine of long-term growth, following years of underinvestment and stalled projects, and as resource-rich Asian economies increasingly look overseas to secure supplies of critical minerals and diversify investment portfolios.

Government and industry estimates suggest Pakistan’s untapped mineral resources could be worth trillions of dollars, anchored by major copper-gold deposits such as Reko Diq, as well as coal, iron ore and emerging critical minerals. Meanwhile, Indonesia, one of the world’s leading producers of minerals such as nickel, coal and copper, has in recent years expanded the role of its state-owned firms in overseas energy and extractive ventures, driven by rising domestic demand, industrial policy linked to downstream processing and global competition for strategic resources.

Against this backdrop, Federal Minister for Petroleum Ali Pervaiz Malik met Indonesia’s Ambassador to Pakistan, Chandra Warsenanto Sukotjo, on Thursday to discuss cooperation with a particular focus on minerals and exploration, the information ministry said.

“Indonesia’s state-owned company, Pertamina, possesses extensive experience in exploration, and avenues for cooperation in exploration activities between the two countries could be explored,” the Indonesian ambassador said, according to the statement.

Malik welcomed Indonesia’s interest and assured full government support, highlighting what the statement described as Pakistan’s “vast untapped potential” in minerals and exploration. He encouraged Indonesian companies to partner with Pakistani firms on mutually beneficial projects.

The petroleum minister also formally invited Indonesia to participate in the Pakistan Minerals Investment Forum (PMIF) 2026, telling the ambassador that the upcoming event would be significantly larger than the previous two editions and aimed at attracting a wider pool of international investors.

Both sides agreed to continue engagement and explore concrete opportunities to deepen cooperation across minerals, exploration and energy, the statement said, framing the talks as part of broader efforts to strengthen Pakistan–Indonesia economic ties beyond traditional diplomatic and cultural links.

Pakistan holds significant reserves of copper, gold, coal and other minerals across Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Gilgit-Baltistan, but officials say much of this potential remains underdeveloped due to legal disputes, infrastructure gaps and lack of foreign investment. In recent years, Islamabad has sought to change that by resolving long-running disputes, hosting international mineral investment forums, and courting partners from North America, the Gulf and Asia.

The government has placed particular emphasis on large-scale projects such as the Reko Diq copper-gold mine in Balochistan, while also encouraging smaller exploration and mining ventures through joint partnerships with foreign companies and state-owned enterprises.