This video says about itself:
Afghanistan: Deported refugee commits suicide after return to Kabul
12 July 2018
Deported refugees and government officials lamented the suicide of a 23-year-old Afghan man who died six days after being deported from Germany, on a visit to a Kabul guesthouse on Thursday.
Returnees from Austria said they had been forced into a corner by European governments.
“I cannot live in Afghanistan and don’t know what to do? Where do I go? I want to survive and live in peace”, said Wazir Hussain.
While Sayed Kamal said he was deported “for no reason”.
A spokesperson from the Ministry of Refugees and Repatriations, Hafiz Ahmad Maikhel, urged partners in Europe to show mercy to Afghan asylum seekers.
“We ask the European countries to consider violence in Afghanistan while they are processing the applications of Afghan asylum seekers”, he stated in a brief interview.
Jamal Nasser’s body was found at the Spinzar Hotel, temporary accommodation provided by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) to returning migrants who have nowhere to go.
He was on a flight carrying 69 failed asylum seekers which left Munich on July 4. Interior Minister Horst Seehofer made a joke about celebrating his 69th birthday on the same date.
By Marianne Arens in Germany:
German government organises mass deportations of refugees to Kabul
9 October 2018
The louder the protests of working people, the more deliberate and mercilessly the government pursues its right-wing policies. The most recent collective deportations to Kabul in war-torn Afghanistan were carried out on “German Unity Day”, of all days.
On the same day, October 3, 40,000 people took to the streets in the Bavarian state capital to protest against increased police powers and the “politics of fear.” A few days earlier, more than 30,000 people had demonstrated in Hamburg. In September alone, mass demonstrations against racism and xenophobia took place in Cologne, Berlin, Frankfurt, Chemnitz and other cities.
Despite this, the grand coalition of the Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) and Social Democrats (SPD) is accelerating the pace of its deportation operations. … Because they are preparing social attacks on all workers, the establishment politicians resort to crackdowns on refugees to divide and intimidate the population at large.
Seventeen people were flown to Afghanistan in the latest collective deportation. Eight of them came from Bavaria, the other nine from Baden-Württemberg, Hamburg, Lower Saxony, Rhineland-Palatinate, Schleswig-Holstein and Saxony. Sixty-three federal and four Bavarian state police officers are said to have accompanied them.
With this deportation to a war zone, the state and federal interior ministers are trampling on basic democratic rights, such as the right of asylum and the Geneva Convention on Refugees. Afghanistan is anything but a “safe country of origin”. On average, about 35 members of the security forces die there every day in fighting and attacks by radical Islamists, as the NGO International Crisis Group has reported. In the first half of 2017, almost 1,700 civilians died in violent conflicts, the highest number since 2009. Overall, the number of people killed through violence in Afghanistan in 2018 could reach a new high of well over 20,000.
Since the US and other NATO powers, including Germany, occupied the country 17 years ago, Afghanistan has been in a state of war. Just hours before the aircraft started its engines in Munich on October 3, there was another bloody attack on a public event in the province of Nangarhar. At least 13 people, including children, were killed and more than 30 injured.
According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the security situation in Afghanistan has recently deteriorated significantly. On August 30, in its latest guidelines, the UNHCR urgently called for a deportation ban to this country. Kabul cannot be a place of safety for those affected, according to UNHCR guidelines. “Members of the civilian population who participate in everyday economic and social life in Kabul are at risk of falling victim to the general violence affecting the city.”
Moreover, the population in Kabul is increasingly suffering from poverty and hunger. This reassessment by the UNHCR has already resulted in Finland suspending deportations until further notice. But not the German government.
On behalf of the minister of the interior, State Secretary Helmut Teichmann said that the directive of the High Commissioner for Refugees represents “a mere recommendation of the UNHCR, based on the evaluation of various sources. The BAMF [Federal Office for Migration and Refugees], however, continues to hold the view that Kabul is fundamentally eligible as a place of internal safety.”
The brutality and recklessness of the authorities are shown by the cases reported by the Bavarian Refugee Council and other bodies. Accordingly, in the early morning hours of October 2, a young Afghan man was arrested in Nuremberg. He had been living in Germany for eight years, had his own apartment and was in a steady relationship with a woman for seven years. “An apprenticeship as a gardener was terminated because he was constantly being called to the immigration office”, writes the Refugee Council. “A new job offer as a drywall constructor is available but has not been approved by the immigration authority. The potential employer would be happy to hire him because he desperately needs dedicated workers.”
In two other cases, deportation was aborted at the last minute due to protests. These cases only hint at what fate threatens those who are nevertheless deported.
Eighteen-year-old vocational student Ahmed A. was arrested in Passau on September 27 at his college and taken into deportation custody five days before the deportation flight. On October 1, he was to have started his training course. The young man is from Ghazni, a town taken by the Taliban a few weeks ago. Only when teachers, classmates and friends organised a public campaign for him was Ahmed released, shortly before the deportation was to take place.
It was a similar experience for Mujtaba A., a 22-year-old Afghan, also from Passau. He was arrested on September 18 and placed in deportation custody in Bremen. He too was only released due to widespread public protests. Mujtaba had successfully completed a year of vocational college and then completed a six-week internship as a cook in a restaurant. The company had agreed he could undertake his chef’s apprenticeship there. The only thing missing was a work permit from the Central Immigration Office.
The young man, who is not accused of any crime, lives in a committed relationship with a mother of two children. She had done everything in her power and successfully alerted the Bavarian media to save her partner from deportation at the last minute. However, these cases only show how arbitrarily the authorities act and that the officially claimed case-by-case examination is a fable.
The deportation of the 17 Afghans to Kabul on the night of October 3 brings the number of people expelled to the war zone to 383. There were 228 this year alone. The largest mass deportation to Afghanistan so far, some 69 people, took place at the beginning of July. Interior Minister Horst Seehofer (CSU) had celebrated this with downright sadistic satisfaction: “Precisely on my 69th birthday, 69 people—I didn’t plan it that way—were returned to Afghanistan. This is far above the usual number.” A few days later, it was announced that one of the deportees had taken his own life after his forcible return to Kabul.
Federal Interior Minister Horst Seehofer (Christian Social Union, CSU) has presented a 60-page bill on the deportation of refugees. The bill bears the imprimatur of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) from start to finish. It makes a mockery of democratic principles; it is a document of bureaucratic cruelty and, if passed by the Bundestag, would set a precedent for the suppression of social and political opposition: here.
The number of deportations from Germany to the Maghreb states (Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia) rose sharply last year. This was reported by the Rheinische Post in its online edition of February 22, based on figures obtained from the federal Interior Ministry. Almost 1,900 people were sent back to the North African states during 2018. Last year, 369 people were deported to Tunisia compared to just 251 in 2017; 687 were returned to Algeria, compared to 504 in 2017; and 826 were sent back to Morocco, compared to 634 in 2017. This amounts to a 35 percent increase in the deportation rate in one year: here.
Germany continues deportations to Afghanistan: here.
Reblogged this on sdbast.
LikeLike
Pingback: Big Italian protest against arrest of pro-refugee mayor | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Enormous anti-racist demonstration in Berlin, Germany | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Muslim solidarity with Pittsburgh anti-Semitic massacre victims | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Turkish journalist deported from Germany for criticizing Erdogan regime | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Spanish media promote neofascists | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: German military nazi murder plot | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: German army neo-nazi terrorism | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Trump’s ICE almost deports United States citizen | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Neo-nazi network in German police | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: German neo-fascist politician in South African pro-apartheid paramilitary | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: German far-right politician injured, lies and truth | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Rosa Luxemburg, Karl Liebknecht murdered, 100 years ago | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Scientific progress, capitalist social backwardness | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Fascists march in Auschwitz | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Anti-Semitic violence in Germany | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Australian Islamophobe murders over 49 New Zealanders | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: New Zealand Islamophobic terror and worldwide fascism | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: New Zealand nazi terrorism, no ‘lone wolf’ | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Dutch government deports refugees to death in Afghanistan | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Stop deporting refugees, German demonstrators demand | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Austrian Hitler hometown racist politician’s neonazi poem | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Pentagon covers up Afghan war | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Dutch government sends refugees to Afghan war | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: European Union accused of ‘fascist rhetoric’ | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Dutch government deports Afghan refugee to war | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Big anti-nazi demonstrations in Germany | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: German mayor driven away by anti-refugee racists | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: German ex-secret service boss preaches racism | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Big German demonstrations against murderous neonazis | Dear Kitty. Some blog