Afghan deported from Germany kills self on return home

Afghan deported from Germany kills self on return home
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By Reuters
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BERLIN (Reuters) - One of 69 Afghans deported from Germany last week committed suicide on his return home, Berlin authorities said on Wednesday, prompting calls for Interior Minister Horst Seehofer to resign.

The man was sent back as Seehofer was waging a battle within Chancellor Angela Merkel's ruling coalition for tighter immigration controls. On Tuesday, Seehoffer had welcomed the deportations and noted that the 69 Afghans had left on his 69th birthday.

A day later an interior ministry official told journalists: "We received confirmation from the Afghan authorities this morning that one of passengers on the repatriation flight was found dead in accommodation in Kabul.

"According to the Afghan authorities, it was a suicide," the official added.

There was no immediate comment from Seehofer.

The Pro Asyl refugee rights organisation said the failed asylum seeker, 23, had lived in Germany for eight years and was a minor when he came to Germany. The government has not confirmed those details.

News of the suicide prompted outrage on social media, with some politicians, including members of his coalition, calling for Seehofer to resign.

"His resignation is overdue. Hello coalition?!?" tweeted Kevin Kuehnert, leader of the youth wing of the Social Democrats (SPD), junior partner in government with Merkel's conservative bloc.

At a news conference on Tuesday, Seehofer launched his "Migration Masterplan", hoping to set his stamp on a tougher border and migration-control policy - one at odds with the open-doors policy Merkel announced at the height of the 2015 refugee crisis.

Seehofer claimed credit for an increase in the pace of deportations of rejected asylum-seekers and cited the 69 Afghans as an example.

Pro Asyl said 51 of the 69 were sent back from the state of Bavaria, home to Seehofer's Christian Social Union (CSU) - the sister party of Merkel's Christian Democratic Union (CDU).

Seehofer is fighting to hang on to the CSU party chairmanship as the CSU sinks in the polls, 10 years after he became leader. Bavarian Premier Markus Soeder is his main rival.

Some in the CSU see robust language as an effective way of challenging the anti-immigration Alternative for Germany (AfD), which threatens to erode the CSU's strength in a regional election in Bavaria in October.

(Reporting by Riham Alkousaa; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

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