AT Monitoring Desk
KABUL: Germany has deported another group of failed Afghan
asylum seekers to their country, according to the dpa news agency.
Forty-four Afghans arrived in Kabul on October 9 — the 28th such group that
has been deported in less than three years.
Since December 2016, 720 Afghans have been flown back to Afghanistan.
Such deportations are controversial in Germany, where critics say the war-torn
country remains too dangerous to send asylum seekers back.
In the first six months of this year, 1,366 civilians were killed in the Afghan
conflict, according to UN data.
On October 7, at least 10 civilians, including a child, were killed after
explosives placed in a rickshaw blew up next to a bus carrying Afghan Army
recruits in Afghanistan’s eastern Nangarhar Province.
Ataullah Khogyani, a spokesman for the provincial governor, said 27 other
people were wounded in the attack in the provincial capital, Jalalabad.
No group has claimed responsibility for the attack. Both the Islamic State
militant group and the Taliban are active in Nangarhar.
Meanwhile, a child rights group has said that every single child born and
raised in Afghanistan in the past 18 years has experienced and been affected by
war and conflict.
The Save the Children statement was issued on October 7, the day marking 18
years since the U.S.-led intervention in Afghanistan that followed the
September 11, 2001, attacks in the United States.