The French government has announced this Thursday that France has suspended expelling Afghan migrants whose asylum applications had been rejected, due to the deteriorating security situation in the country as the Taliban offensive approaches Kabul.
The French interior ministry said in a statement that the policy had been in place since early July, after similar announcements of the suspension of such expulsions by Germany and the Netherlands.
According to the ministry: "We are watching the situation closely alongside our European partners."
In 2020, Afghans had accounted for the most asylum requests in France, with 8,886 applications.
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Germany and the Netherlands said Wednesday they have stopped forced repatriations of Afghan migrants because of deteriorating security in Afghanistan, a sharp change from their previous position.
Officials had said as late as Tuesday that both governments had joined their counterparts in Austria, Belgium, Denmark and Greece to write to the EU's executive arm saying they should be allowed to press on with expulsions of Afghan migrants if their asylum bids fail.
Afghanistan urged the EU in July to cease forced deportations of Afghan migrants for three months as security forces battle the Taliban offensive ahead of the full US military pullout from Afghanistan on 31 August.
Les #Taliban ont pris jeudi la ville stratégique de #Ghazni, à 150 km au sud-ouest de #Kaboul. Ils se rapprochent ainsi dangereusement de la capitale.@soniaghe, correspondante de @FRANCE24 en #Afghanistan 🇦🇫, nous donne plus de précisions sur la situation pic.twitter.com/kOIITAycYH
— FRANCE 24 Français (@France24_fr) August 12, 2021
Government losing control
The Taliban have overrun 10 provincial capitals in a week in a lightning offensive, the latest the strategic Afghan city of Ghazni, just 150 kilometres from Kabul.
The government has now effectively lost most of northern and western Afghanistan and is left holding a scattered collection of contested cities also dangerously at risk of falling to the Taliban.
The conflict has escalated dramatically since May, when US-led forces began the final stage of a troop withdrawal due to end later this month following a 20-year occupation.