Germany to seek direct contact with Taliban on deportations

Germany to seek direct contact with Taliban on deportations
German Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt says he wants to make making agreements directly with the Taliban government in Afghanistan to enable deportations. (Reuters/File))
Short Url
Updated 04 July 2025

Germany to seek direct contact with Taliban on deportations

Germany to seek direct contact with Taliban on deportations
  • German interior minister says he wants direct contact with the Taliban to ensure criminals can be deported back to Afghanistan

BERLIN: Germany’s interior minster on Thursday said he wanted direct contact with the Taliban authorities in a bid to enable criminals to be deported back to Afghanistan.

“I envision us making agreements directly with Afghanistan to enable deportations,” Alexander Dobrindt said in an interview with Focus magazine.

Berlin currently has only indirect contact with the Taliban through third parties, an arrangement Dobrindt said “cannot remain a permanent solution.”

Germany stopped deportations to Afghanistan and closed its embassy in Kabul following the Taliban’s return to power in 2021.

But a debate over resuming expulsions has flared as migration becomes a key issue amid the rise of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.

Twenty-eight Afghan nationals who had been convicted of crimes were deported in August last year after Germany’s previous government carried out indirect negotiations with the Taliban.

No further deportations have taken place. But the debate has continued to rage, especially since a series of deadly attacks last year blamed on asylum seekers — with several of the suspects from Afghanistan.

Germany’s new government, a coalition between the conservative CDU/CSU and the center-left Social Democrats (SPD), has promised to expel more foreign criminals alongside a crackdown on irregular migration.

Dobrindt also said he was in contact with authorities to enable deportations to Syria, which have been suspended since 2012.

Longtime Syrian ruler Bashar Assad was toppled in December. The country is now under the control of Islamist leaders, some of whom were once linked with the Al-Qaeda jihadist network.

Germany has made tentative contact with the new authorities and has sent several delegations to Damascus for talks.

Chancellor Friedrich Merz this week said he believed “deportations to Syria are possible today, given the current circumstances and situation.”

Austria on Thursday deported a Syrian convict back to Syria, becoming the first EU country to do so officially in recent years.


Musk’s Starlink to start services in India

Updated 9 sec ago

Musk’s Starlink to start services in India

Musk’s Starlink to start services in India
NEW DELHI: India’s Maharashtra state, home to financial hub Mumbai, will be the first to roll out Elon Musk’s Starlink Internet service in the world’s most populous country, the chief minister said.
The launch of Starlink, which provides high-speed Internet to remote locations using low-orbit satellites, has sparked fierce debate in India over issues ranging from predatory pricing to spectrum allocation.
India — projected to have more than 900 million Internet users by year’s end — granted Starlink a license in June.
Maharashtra was “poised to become the first Indian state to formally collaborate with Starlink,” the state’s Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis said on the Musk-owned platform X late Wednesday.
“This collaboration... will ensure the state leads India in satellite-enabled digital infrastructure.”
In March, India’s biggest telecom service providers — Jio Platforms and its rival Bharti Airtel — announced deals with SpaceX to offer Starlink Internet to their customers.
Starlink’s business operations vice president Lauren Dreyer said she was “excited” to further India’s digital vision.
“Looking forward to connecting schools, medical facilities and beyond in the most remote and unconnected areas once Starlink receives final approvals,” Dreyer said in a statement.
Major technology firms looking to court users in the world’s fifth-largest economy have made a flurry of announcements about expanding into the country this year.
In October, Google announced it will invest $15 billion in India over the next five years to build a giant data center and artificial intelligence base there, the largest AI hub it is investing in outside of the United States.
US companies Anthropic, OpenAI are both planning Indian offices, while Perplexity announced a major partnership in July with Indian telecom giant Airtel.