German interior minister seeks direct migrant deportation deal with Taliban

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FILE PHOTO: Germany's Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt and Sinan Selen, Vice-President of the German Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (not pictured), attend a press conference to present the 'Constitution Protection Report 2024' in Berlin, Germany June 10, 2025. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch/File Photo

Germany's Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt said the country requires third parties to conduct talks with Afghanistan at present.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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BERLIN - German Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt wants to negotiate a direct agreement with the Taliban on receiving Afghan migrants deported from Germany, he told Focus magazine in an interview.

In August 2024, Germany

resumed flying convicted criminals of Afghan nationality to their home country

, after pausing deportations following the Taliban’s takeover in August 2021, with the support of what Berlin said were “key regional partners”.

Germany does not recognise the Taliban government as legitimate and has no official diplomatic ties with it.

“My idea is that we make agreements directly with Afghanistan to enable repatriations,” Mr Dobrindt said in the interview published online on the evening of July 3.

“We still need third parties to conduct talks with Afghanistan. This cannot remain a permanent solution,” added the politician from the conservative CSU, the Bavarian sister party of Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s CDU.

Mr Merz had pledged to deport people to Afghanistan and Syria, as well as

halt refugee admission programmes

for German agencies’ former local staff in Afghanistan and suspend family reunification as part of the conservatives’ election platform.

Migration was a pivotal issue in February's national elections following the

rise of the far right

and

several high-profile attacks by migrants

.

In the interview, Mr Dobrindt said Germany was also in contact with Syria – where an Islamist government has taken power following the

fall of veteran leader Bashar al-Assad last December

– on reaching an agreement on deporting criminals of Syrian nationality.

Syrians and Afghans are the two largest groups of asylum seekers in Germany, with 76,765 Syrians and 34,149 Afghans applying for the status in 2024, according to federal migration office figures. REUTERS

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