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Fourth Flight of Afghans With German Admission Promises Lands in Hannover

A Pakistani year-end cutoff now drives Germany's cautious vetting, with courts compelling some admissions.

Overview

  • A scheduled IslamabadIstanbul flight brought seven families totaling 31 people to Hannover on Tuesday, marking the fourth transfer since the programme halt in May.
  • About 1,900 vulnerable Afghans holding prior admission promises remain in Pakistan awaiting processing under a year-end window set by Islamabad.
  • The Interior Ministry is offering cash and material support to applicants who voluntarily withdraw, with letters citing examples including €2,500 in Pakistan and €10,000 after departure, though amounts vary by case.
  • Applicants who accept the offer exit the process with no path back, a move criticized by aid group Kabul Luftbrücke as inadequate and unsafe for those fearing Taliban persecution.
  • Despite the end of voluntary federal intake, German administrative courts have ordered admissions in numerous cases, and authorities require document and security checks before travel.