Deported Afghan rapist seeks re-entry into Germany under human rights laws

Screengrab youtube

A convicted Afghan asylum seeker, deported for his involvement in the drugging and gang rape of a 14-year-old girl, is seeking to return to Germany, citing family ties.

The Afghan, identified as Mukthar N., was part of a group that drugged and raped a 14-year-old girl for hours in Illerkirchberg. His case caused national outrage, particularly when it emerged that after serving a 26-month prison sentence, he was briefly placed back in the community without warning to residents.

Police classified him as a high-risk offender with the potential to commit further sexual crimes, and he was even placed under police protection for a short time. After considerable backlash, the man was deported back to Afghanistan in August 2024.

His lawyer is now actively appealing for his re-entry under human rights laws protecting his right to life with his family — he has a wife and child in Baden-Württemberg.

Bild reported how he recently made an emotional plea in a TV report in which he said tearfully, “I want to see my child, I want to be there for my wife.”

When he was deported, the child rapist was barred from re-entry to Germany for six years, but just months later in November 2024, he attempted to appeal his deportation in order to return — a request that was denied in January.

His eventual deportation in August 2024 was part of a collective flight carrying 28 Afghan criminals back to their home country — the first such repatriation since the Taliban took power in 2021.

Illerkirchberg Mayor Markus Häußler described the deportation as the removal of a “thorn in the flesh,” expressing relief on behalf of local residents.

Human rights laws are frequently misused to launch legal challenges and thwart legal challenges to deportations from Europe, with thousands of Afghan criminals still residing in Germany.

Following a brief pause during the election campaign, flights relocating Afghan refugees from a German-managed reception center in Islamabad, Pakistan, have resumed, with over 3,000 individuals expected to be brought to Europe in the coming weeks. This is despite previous concerns about lax security checks.

In 2021, then-Federal Minister of the Interior Horst Seehofer (CSU) revealed that at least 20 of the Afghans evacuated by the Bundeswehr had failed security screenings. Among them were convicted rapists and individuals previously deported from Germany due to security concerns. Reports also indicated that some evacuees had ties to counter-terrorism watchlists.

The political landscape has further complicated the issue. Chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz, who previously promised sweeping immigration reforms during the election campaign, has softened his stance. After the possibility of forming a “Grand Coalition” with the Social Democrats (SPD) emerged, Merz stated that “no one has any desire to close the borders.”

Any agreement with the SPD is likely to see the culture of mass immigration into Germany continue with reports on Wednesday that the far-left party’s Migration and Diversity Working Group wants to reject the hypothetical hardline course set by the CDU.

The group argues that Germany needs 500,000 legal migrants every year on top of asylum seekers who usually enter the country illegally, which it argues would help replace retiring workers.

https://rmx.news/germany/deported-afghan-rapist-seeks-re-entry-into-germany-under-human-rights-laws/

One thought on “Deported Afghan rapist seeks re-entry into Germany under human rights laws”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *