In Germany, deportations of rejected asylum seekers to Kabul are set to resume, reviving the heated debate over the security situation in Afghanistan. InfoMigrants looks at the current developments.

This Tuesday, a flight is set to take off from Düsseldorf to Kabul carrying 15 rejected asylum seekers after a brief moratorium on deportations to Afghanistan.

In June, Chancellor Angela Merkel postponed a flight of deported asylum seekers after a truck bomb killed 90 people in Afghanistan's capital, Kabul. But in August, the German government made the decision to restart deportations to Afghanistan.

Deportation flights began taking off from Germany to Kabul last December, after Berlin made a deal to repatriate failed Afghan asylum seekers in October 2016.

Around 10,000 Afghans await deportation

From January to August 2017, there were 134,935 initial asylum applications in Germany. Of those, 9.1 percent came from Afghanistan, the third highest group after Syria and Iraq. In the first-half of 2017, the German government sent back 261 people to Afghanistan. As of August, around 10,000 Afghans whose asylum requests were denied are no longer legally allowed to stay in Germany. The policy change occurred because some governmental officials consider it a safe country of origin as compared to countries like Syria or Iraq, where active conflicts are displacing millions.

German human rights group Pro Asyl has heavily criticized the deportations from Germany to Afghanistan and is "outraged" by the German government's recent declaration to restart deportations there. "War dominates Afghanistan. Hundreds of thousands of people are fleeing,” said Günter Burkhardt, the organization's managing director. The Pro Asyl organization has frequently demonstrated at German airports where the deportations have taken place. In late August, 500 students protested in the German city of Offenbach over the pending deportation of their Afghan classmates. In March, high school students in Cottbus made headlines across Germany with a similar campaign to save three classmates from being deported to Kabul.

Across Germany, pro-asylum activists have staged protests against deportations to Afghanistan

Election debate

German Chancellor Angela Merkel initially embraced an open door asylum policy in 2015, allowing over 1.2 million asylum seekers into the country. But following events such as the Cologne New Year’s eve assaults in 2015 and the attack on a Berlin Christmas market by a rejected Tunisian asylum seeker, Merkel has begun to take a tougher stance on deportations. Merkel's Christian Democratic Union has advocated for more deportations, with Afghanistan being the main country of focus.

The Social Democratic Party, led by Martin Schulz, wants to stop deportations to Afghanistan on security grounds, as do the Left Party and the Green Party. In February of this year, the German government unveiled a program called Starthilfe Plus that would pay 1200 euros to migrants that would return to their country before their asylum status was decided.

Security situation

Although Afghanistan is safer now than it was 15 years ago, security threats still persist. In addition to the bomb attack in Kabul that occurred in June, there have been numerous attacks in Afghanistan over the past year. In late August, 'Islamic State' militants stormed a mosque, killing at least 20 people. In February, the Afghan Supreme Court was attacked by a suicide bomber, killing 20 people. In March, two attacks occurred with one in Kabul at a police station on March 1 killing seven people and one just a week later killing fifty people at a hospital.

Attacks like these aren't the only issue, however. Minorities from Afghanistan who make it to Germany may face discrimination. For example, in January this year an Afghan-Hindu was deported. Afghan-Hindus face religious persecution in Afghanistan as it is a conservative Islamic country. Other minorities, like the Shiite Hazaras, face danger from Sunni extremists in their home country.