BERLIN — Shakerah Baresh and her four children were on one of the last planes to
Germany.
Baresh, the former principal of a girl’s school in Afghanistan’s northeastern
Panjshir province, arrived in Germany with her children at the end of March,
just weeks before German Chancellor Friedrich Merz came to power with a vow to
drastically curtail the influx of asylum-seekers into Germany.
Before their flight touched down in the central German city of Hannover, Baresh
and her children had been among the some 2,500 Afghans living in Islamabad,
Pakistan, where they had been waiting to be resettled in Germany after
authorities deemed them particularly vulnerable following the Taliban’s return
to power in 2021.
After Merz became chancellor, however, the German government effectively
suspended the program and stopped the flights, a decision that stranded the
Afghans — among them women’s rights activists and LGBTQ+ people — in Pakistan.
“These people are praying for the German government to not stop the program,”
said Baresh from her new home in a western German town not far from the Rhine
River. “There is no other option for them. They can’t go back.”
After the Taliban’s reconquest of Afghanistan, Western countries initially
provided escape routes to vulnerable Afghans, particularly those who had
assisted their militaries during the two-decade-long war that began after the
Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States. Germany was the
third-largest destination for resettled Afghans after the U.S. and Canada. But
anti-immigration sentiment across the West, including in America and Germany,
has brought about what activists and experts say is a premature end to those
resettlement programs.
“It’s a double hit, both to resettlement programs globally and to this specific
population in Pakistan,” said Susan Fratzke, a senior policy analyst at the
Migration Policy Institute.
UNDER PRESSURE FROM THE FAR RIGHT
Germany is not the only country closing the door to Afghans seeking refuge.
Earlier this year, U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order
suspending refugee admissions to the U.S., leaving thousands of Afghan nationals
awaiting resettlement in Pakistan. This month, Trump issued a proclamation
blocking Afghan nationals from traveling to the U.S.; his administration also
terminated temporary protected status for Afghans.
Germany is taking a somewhat similar course. Under increasing political pressure
due to the rise of the far-right, anti-immigration Alternative for Germany (AfD)
— now the country’s largest opposition party — Merz has vowed to sharply cut the
number of asylum-seekers allowed to enter the country. In the lead-up to
Germany’s Feb. 23 snap election, a spate of knife attacks partly blamed on
Afghan migrants also increased pressure on Merz to take a harder course on
Afghan resettlement, particularly as AfD politicians called for the mass
deportation of Afghans and other migrants.
Merz’s conservative-led government vowed in its coalition agreement with the
center-left Social Democratic Party to “end voluntary federal admission programs
as far as possible and not set up any new programs.” In practice, that means
resettlements “are currently suspended until a decision is made,” according to
an interior ministry spokesperson.
Some German government officials are also raising doubts as to whether Afghans
in resettlement programs have been properly vetted. Officials at the German
Embassy in Islamabad suspect that thousands of the Afghans who have been
resettled in Germany “wrongly received a confirmation of admission and
subsequently a visa” based on false statements, according to a report in German
magazine Der Spiegel that cited an internal 2023 document and anonymous sources.
Among them were people with close links to the Taliban, according to the Spiegel
report.
A spokesperson for Germany’s foreign ministry, which partly runs the
resettlement program and has been criticized for the alleged security breaches,
underscored that its program for Afghans is among the country’s most secure
admission procedures and entails multiple security interviews by German
intelligence officers.
Germany has resettled 36,400 Afghan nationals since the Taliban’s return,
according to the foreign ministry. The biggest share of the resettlements came
in the immediate aftermath of the takeover and were largely meant to protect
those who had worked with Western governments or were otherwise endangered under
the Taliban’s severe brand of Islamic fundamentalism.
Resettlements “are currently suspended until a decision is made,” according to
an interior ministry spokesperson. | Hannibal Hanschke/EFE via EPA
‘MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH’
Baresh said the Taliban had shut down her school for girls and that she had been
arrested repeatedly for her advocacy of women’s rights. The third time she was
arrested, she said, the Taliban threatened her life, with one man telling her
“one bullet is enough.”
Following the threat she went into hiding for a year while her children went to
live with a family member in Kabul. A German nongovernmental organization then
helped Baresh apply for the German resettlement program.
She, like others accepted by the German government, went to Pakistan to await
resettlement. Reunited with her children there, she waited over a year for the
chartered flight that took them to Germany.
Others continue to wait. In public statements, some German leaders say they will
honor commitments to those they’ve already agreed to resettle.
“Where we have given legally binding admission commitments, we will of course
keep them,” said Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul in the Bundestag in June.
When asked about these comments, a spokesperson for the interior ministry said
authorities were looking into how to “terminate voluntary admission programs to
the degree possible.”
Meanwhile, activists say the Afghans awaiting resettlement in Pakistan are
growing increasingly exasperated.
“The people on site are panicking,” said Jörg Hutter, who works for the LSVD+
rights organization and helps with the resettlement of LGBTQ+ people from
Afghanistan. “It’s not clear to anyone whether they will get out alive or not.
And that increases traumatization.”
Meanwhile, the situation for Afghans who have fled to Pakistan is deteriorating.
More than 280,000 Afghans were pressured to return home or were deported to
Afghanistan from Pakistan and Iran in April, according to a UNHCR report, many
of them women and girls who face oppression under Taliban rule.
Baresh expressed her deep appreciation to the German government for resettling
her family. “We’re safe now and can live like humans again,” she said.
She then appealed to the German authorities. “Please, bring the refugees that
are now in Pakistan, especially the activists, to Germany,” she said. “Because
it’s a matter of life and death.”
Tag - Afghanistan war
The Russian Prosecutor General’s Office requested Monday that the Supreme Court
ends a ban on the Taliban’s activities in the country.
Moscow’s foreign and justice ministries submitted an appeal last week to
President Vladimir Putin urging the Taliban’s removal from Russia’s list of
terrorist organizations.
The Taliban is a political and militant Islamist group that emerged in
Afghanistan in the early 1990s, and has ruled in Kabul since the U.S. withdrew
from the country in August 2021.
The Russian hearing is scheduled for April 17 and will be held behind closed
doors, the Supreme Court press service said in a statement, state-owned media
outlet TASS reported.
“The Supreme Court of the Russian Federation has received and accepted for
consideration an administrative claim by the Prosecutor General of the Russian
Federation to suspend the ban on the activities of the Taliban movement,
included in the unified federal list of organizations, including foreign and
international organizations recognized in accordance with the legislation of the
Russian Federation as terrorist,” the Supreme Court added.
Russia’s relationship with the Taliban regime has evolved over time, as Moscow’s
own ostracism from the West grew following its escalating aggression in Ukraine.
The Taliban was added to Russia’s blacklist in 2003 for backing separatists in
the North Caucasus. However, following the hardcore Islamist group’s takeover of
Afghanistan in 2021, Moscow has progressively deepened its diplomatic engagement
with the Taliban, hosting delegations for negotiations and even permitting its
participation in international forums.
In July, Putin called the group “a trusted ally,” adding that the movement could
help Russia’s fight against the Islamic State.
On Dec. 28, the Russian leader signed a law permitting the temporary suspension
of bans on organizations included in the terrorist list.