
Germany must honour visa obligations to Afghans
The new government under conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz has frozen the programme, but Berlin's administrative court said the family had been given a "legally binding" commitment and must be allowed to travel to Germany.
About 2,500 Afghans with similar approvals are estimated to be in Pakistan waiting to be able to travel to Germany.
The programme was set up for those who worked with Germany's army or other institutions in Afghanistan, as well as journalists and activists judged to be threatened by the Taliban.
However, the new government under Merz — who made a crackdown on immigration one of his key election pledges — has said in its coalition agreement it wants to end the programme "as far as possible".
The family concerned by Tuesday's decision is currently in Pakistan and had lodged an urgent appeal, telling the court they were about to be deported to Afghanistan where they would be in fear of their lives.
The family was given approval to come to Germany in 2023 under the programme.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
1696275825-0%2Fimage-800x600-(10)1696275825-0-640x480.webp&w=3840&q=100)

Express Tribune
6 hours ago
- Express Tribune
3m Afghans could return this year: UN
Listen to article Three million Afghans could return to their country this year, a UN refugee official said Friday, warning that the repatriation flow is placing intense pressure on an already major humanitarian crisis. Iran and Pakistan have introduced new policies affecting displaced Afghans, with Tehran already having given four million "illegal" Afghans until July 6 to leave Iranian territory. "What we are seeing is the undignified, disorganized and massive exodus of Afghans from both countries, which is generating enormous pressures on the homeland that is willing to receive them and yet utterly unprepared to do so," the UNHCR representative in Afghanistan, Arafat Jamal, said during a video press conference from Kabul. "Of concern to us is this scale, the intensity and the manner in which returns are occurring." Over 1.6 million Afghans have already returned from Pakistan and Iran this year, the large majority from Iran, Jamal added. The figure already exceeds the UNHCR's initial forecasts of 1.4 million for 2025.


Business Recorder
8 hours ago
- Business Recorder
India-Pakistan conflict: FO rejects Indian NSA's remarks
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has strongly reacted to the recent remarks made by the Indian National Security Adviser (NSA) Ajit Doval regarding Pakistan-India stalemate, terming it distorted and tainted. Speaking at a Weekly Media Briefing on Friday, Foreign Office (FO) Spokesperson Ambassador Shafqat Ali Khan said, 'Doval's remarks not only reflect a deliberate attempt to mislead the public, but also violate the norms of a responsible statecraft.' 'Military aggression against a sovereign nation is a grave breach of the United Nations Charter and established principles of the international law,' he added. It is a matter of public record that India has targeted civilian infrastructure rather than militant or terrorist hideouts. Rather than resorting to false narrative, the spokesperson remarked India should accept the downing of six fighter jets by Pakistan Air Force in self-defence and inflicting severe damages to other military targets. Furthermore, Ambassador Khan strongly condemned the ongoing human rights violations in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK). The occupying Indian forces continue to kill innocent civilians with impunity. This grave situation remains a matter of deep concern for Pakistan and the international community must take not of it. Referring to former foreign minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari's comments in an interview to a foreign media outlet, the FO spokesperson clarified that no individual was personally named. Bilawal's remarks pertained to concerns regarding the conduct of certain state actors, not individuals. It is to mention here that Bilawal had suggested that certain individuals of 'particular concern' should be extradited for CBMs with India. To a query, Ambassador Khan said Pakistan remains in active communication with Afghan authorities at multiple levels. Discussions are ongoing to address cross-border terrorism emanating from sanctuaries in Afghanistan, which continue to pose a serious threat to Pakistan's security and territorial integrity. These dialogues follow the Deputy Prime Minister's visit to Afghanistan on April 19 and are aimed at identifying common grounds for cooperation. 'TTP poses a serious threat to Pakistan's security. Pakistan hopes that Afghan authorities will acknowledge the gravity of this threat and take decisive action against terrorist groups and sanctuaries operating from Afghan soil.' Responding to another question he pointed out that Indian state-sponsored terrorism within Pakistan is a matter of global concern. India's destabilising role in the region, through support for terror elements, has been exposed repeatedly. Pakistan maintains strategic ties with China, its 'iron brother,' and continues to pursue cordial relations with both the United States and China, he said, adding Pakistan values its partnerships and seeks balanced engagement based on mutual respect. Pakistan will participate in the upcoming Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Foreign Ministers' Meeting. The FO spokesperson said the Deputy Prime Minister Dar is scheduled to attend, although there are currently no plans for a bilateral meeting or handshake with India's External Affairs Minister (EAM). In addition, he said the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) affects over 250 million people. The recent decision by the Court of Arbitration further weakens India's already de-legitimise position on the sensitive matter. The revival of Pakistan Steel Mills (PSM), the spokesperson was of the view that it is a symbol of Pakistan-Russia friendship. He added that Pakistan remains in contact with Washington to address trade tariffs and is hopeful for a positive outcome that benefits both sides. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025


Business Recorder
8 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Afghanistan now in very advantageous position
Afghanistan, long a theater of war and humanitarian crises, is re-emerging as a central node in the evolving geopolitics of Asia and Eurasian alignment—the one driven by economics, regional interest, and realism rather than ideological divides. This time the recalibration of the region is driven by the regional stakeholders while the West is taking a back seat in a region it once tried to reshape by force. In a profound shift across the region, Central Asian Republics are reconnecting with Afghanistan after a 50-year hiatus. Russia has extended diplomatic recognition to the Taliban regime. China has secured economic and strategic footholds under the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). The United States, though militarily withdrawn, continues to eye Afghan mineral wealth. Most notably, Pakistan, Iran, and Afghanistan have now agreed to cooperate within China's BRI framework—a move that redefines the regional chessboard and redraws lines of influence across Asia. Meanwhile, Pakistan is positioning itself as a bridge between South Asia, Central Asia, and the Middle East, one that passes through Afghanistan. India, watching from the eastern flank, sees both a strategic exclusion and a threat. As regional alignments shift westward and northward, New Delhi faces the reality of being sidelined in a reconfigured Eurasian connectivity map. In South Asia also, it is facing a threat of exclusion as, upon the demise of SAARC, China and Pakistan are exploring a Beijing-led regional alternative to revitalize cooperation in South Asia. This development could redefine regional power dynamics, marginalize India's influence, and establish parallel regional orders. For India, it raises alarms of encirclement along its borders. Moscow's recognition of the Taliban government breaks the ice for other regional actors. Russia's move is not merely symbolic; it, in fact, opens the door for Afghanistan's inclusion in Eurasian multilateral structures such as the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), and the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU). For the Central Asian Republics it could mean a historic reconnection particularly for Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Tajikistan. For these landlocked nations, the Afghan corridor offers the shortest and most viable land route to the Arabian Sea via Pakistan's Gwadar and Karachi ports. For Pakistan, projects like the Mazar-i-Sharif to Peshawar railway, CASA-1000 power corridor, and even revived interest in the long-stalled TAPI gas pipeline signal a major strategic turn. Central Asia, once reliant on Russian routes or Iranian pathways, now sees Afghanistan-Pakistan connectivity as essential for energy exports, trade diversification, and independence from existing bottlenecks. This renewed regional attention to Afghanistan is not coincidental; it is part of a broader BRI-enabled connectivity model where infrastructure diplomacy supersedes ideological alignment. Three key advantages emerge for Pakistan: Strategic geography is monetized - where instead of serving as a buffer or battleground, Pakistan can now convert its location into an economic asset through transit fees, trade routes, and regional energy flows. Geopolitical leverage - with Iran and China converging on Afghan stability and regional integration, Pakistan's central role gives it enhanced diplomatic weight—especially in multilateral forums like the SCO and ECO. Stabilization through connectivity - by anchoring Afghanistan into a web of economic interdependence, Pakistan also serves its own security interests. Stability in Kabul directly affects security in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan. However, political instability, internal militancy, and inconsistent policy execution could undermine Pakistan's regional potential. Strategic clarity and institutional continuity are the prerequisites. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025