
Berlin Turns to Taliban in Deportation Push
Germany grants Taliban-appointed officials access to Afghan consulates to speed up removals, sparking criticism of backdoor recognition.

Germany grants Taliban-appointed officials access to Afghan consulates to speed up removals, sparking criticism of backdoor recognition.

The flight to Kabul was intended to mark a tougher stance on migration, but not all those deported plan to stay away.

Judges redefined “family” to include non-relatives under a secretive relocation programme following the MoD data breach—prompting fears over security and cost.

The flight, delayed by over an hour, saw dozens removed from Germany and reportedly given up to €1,000 each as a travel advance.

After a data breach endangered thousands of Afghans, the ex-defence minister defended the hush-hush operation to bring them to the UK.

£6 billion resettlement costs reveal a lack of government accountability—and blow a new ‘black hole’ in public finances.

Former intel head held informal meeting with ex-president Karzai.

Protecting women and children seems to only be important when they can be used for political extortion, not when they actually need help.

The German government had given a “legally binding” commitment, the court said.

Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt is pushing to resume deportations of convicted criminals to Afghanistan