More Afghans arrive in Germany after limbo in Pakistan

Afghan nationals walk past German policemen to board a bus after they landed at the airport in Hannover-Lenhagen, northwestern Germany, on September 1, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 24 September 2025
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More Afghans arrive in Germany after limbo in Pakistan

  • Afghans were accepted under refugee scheme set up by previous German government
  • Scheme, however, was frozen after conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz took office in May

Berlin: A new group of Afghans who had been promised refuge in Germany arrived in the country on Wednesday, the latest to escape months of limbo in Pakistan.

An interior ministry spokesman told AFP that 28 Afghans landed at Hanover airport in the early afternoon.

The Afghans were accepted under a refugee scheme set up by the previous German government which was frozen after conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz took office in May.

Since then around 2,000 Afghans have been stuck in Pakistan, where they have been threatened with deportation back to Afghanistan.

Some of those affected have mounted successful legal challenges against the German government, forcing the authorities to allow them entry.

A first group of 47 Afghans who won their cases arrived in Germany earlier this month, and those who came on Wednesday had also been successful in the courts.

According to the initiative Airbridge Kabul, set up to help those affected, the latest group — five men, 10 women and 13 children — arrived on a commercial flight from Islamabad.

However, around 250 Afghans who had been waiting to go to Germany have been deported from Pakistan in recent weeks.

A foreign ministry spokesman said on Wednesday that none of them has as yet been able to return to Pakistan.

The German scheme was aimed at Afghans who had worked with German forces in Afghanistan or who were deemed at particular risk from the Taliban, for example journalists, lawyers and human rights activists.

Since Merz’s conservative-led coalition government took power in May, it has put the process on ice as part of a wider push to toughen immigration policy.

Thousands of Afghans waiting in Pakistan to resettle in the United States and several other Western countries are facing a similar predicament as sentiment toward refugees hardens.

Pakistan has been mounting its own crackdown on Afghans without residence permits since 2023, with officials insisting the country cannot be a “transit camp” for those waiting to resettle in the West.


Pakistan deputy PM to visit New York tomorrow to attend UNSC briefing on Palestine

Updated 17 February 2026
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Pakistan deputy PM to visit New York tomorrow to attend UNSC briefing on Palestine

  • The briefing comes days after Israel’s move to approve land registration in the West Bank for the first time since 1967
  • Ishaq Dar will reiterate Pakistan’s opposition to Israel’s move, emphasize ceasefire and humanitarian assistance in Gaza

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s deputy prime minister and foreign minister, Ishaq Dar, will visit New York on Wednesday to participate in a high-level United Nations Security Council (UNSC) briefing on the situation in Palestine, the Pakistani foreign ministry said.

The development comes days after Israel’s move to approve land registration in the West Bank for the first time since 1967, which is likely to make it easier for Jewish settlers to buy land and ultimately annex the area, as well as Israeli ceasefire violations in Gaza.

Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Indonesia, Egypt and Türkiye have condemned the Israeli move, saying it was meant to accelerate illegal settlement activity, land confiscation and applying unlawful Israeli sovereignty over Palestinian territory.

Dar will reaffirm Pakistan’s principled and consistent position on Palestine during the UNSC briefing, which will be presided over by United Kingdom Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper in her capacity as president of the Security Council.

“He (Dar) will reiterate Pakistan’s strong opposition of Israel’s recent illegal decisions to expand its control over the West Bank, emphasize the need for a permanent ceasefire in Gaza, full implementation of Security Council resolution 2803, scaled-up humanitarian assistance, and the early commencement of Gaza’s recovery and reconstruction,” the Pakistan foreign office said on Tuesday.

The UNSC resolution 2803, adopted on Nov. 17, endorsed President Donald Trump’s peace plan for Gaza. Under the plan unveiled by the White House in Oct., Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas have agreed to a framework in which a Palestinian technocratic administration would operate under the oversight of an international board during a transitional period.

Dar will underscore Pakistan’s continued engagement with international and regional partners, including the Group of Eight Arab and Islamic countries and the United States, in support of a just and lasting peace, anchored in international law, leading to the realization of the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination, according to the Pakistani foreign ministry.

He will reiterate Islamabad’s call for the establishment of an “independent, sovereign and contiguous Palestinian state based on pre-1967 borders, with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital,” it added.

The Pakistani deputy PM will also hold bilateral meetings with counterparts to discuss matters of mutual interest on the margins of the visit.