Turkey to Deport Nearly 600 Afghan Asylum Seekers

Turkey to Deport Nearly 600 Afghan Asylum Seekers
Migrants and refugees, mostly from Afghanistan line up to receive food and water from volunteers of the Imece community group, while they wait to leave Turkey at a launching point in the coastal town of Cesme, on Dec. 3, 2015. The flow of boats from Turkey has slowed after a 3 billion euro deal was struck between the EU and Turkey, to slow the flow of migrants and refugees to Europe. Since the deal on Nov. 29, Turkish police have rounded up approximately 1300 migrants and arrested a number of smugglers. Police checkpoints on the roads leading to launch points have been increased slowing the amount of boats leaving turkish shores. (Chris McGrath/Getty Images)
Reuters
4/8/2018
Updated:
4/8/2018

ANKARA–Turkish authorities will deport close to 600 illegal Afghan asylum seekers in eastern Turkey back to Kabul this weekend, the interior ministry said on Saturday.

The Afghan asylum seekers had crossed into Turkey through Iran due to “ongoing terrorist activities and economic troubles” in Afghanistan, the ministry said, and security forces had handed the migrants over to provincial immigration authorities.

It said deportation procedures had been completed for 591 Afghanis in the eastern province of Erzurum and that charter flights to Kabul would be arranged on Saturday and Sunday to send the asylum seekers back.

“Following the completion of deportation procedures for illegal migrants in our other provinces, deportations will speed up and continue in the coming days,” the ministry said in a statement.

Rights groups have criticised Turkey for deporting the asylum seekers back to conflict-torn countries, including Afghanistan, saying it was putting their lives at risk.

This week, the Hurriyet newspaper reported that several thousand Afghan asylum seekers had crossed into Turkey in recent months and had walked for days from the border to reach Erzurum.

Afghanistan has been ravaged by terrorist attacks this year, and the government has made promises to tighten security in the wake of an attack in central Kabul that killed around 100 people in January.

The attacks undermined support for peace talks after they were offered by President Ashraf Ghani in February to the Taliban. The Taliban are fighting to drive out international forces and reimpose their version of strict Islamic law.

The Taliban have so far shown little sign of accepting the offer of talks with the Western-backed government, which they consider an illegitimate, foreign-imposed regime, although they have offered to talk to the United States.

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