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Tajik Deportation Case Renews Scrutiny of Europe’s Asylum Decisions

June 27, 2026

German authorities deported 54-year-old Tajik national Asadullo Boboyev and his 19-year-old son to Tajikistan on 20 June, despite claims that they faced political persecution if returned. According to Radio Liberty’s Tajik Service Ozodi, Boboyev was taken into custody upon arrival, while his son was released to relatives. The case has renewed concerns over how European countries assess asylum claims involving political opposition activists.

According to Boboyev’s wife, Mastona Fayzulloyeva, her husband called shortly before the deportation to say he had been handcuffed and taken to Munich airport. The family says German authorities had previously allowed Boboyev and his son until 1 July to submit additional evidence supporting their asylum application after they were detained in the city of Kleve on 8 June.

Before his deportation, Boboyev said he was being investigated in Tajikistan on extremism-related charges because of his alleged links to the opposition Reform and Development Movement of Tajikistan. The movement’s leader, Sharofiddin Gadoyev, said lawyers submitted extensive evidence to a German court arguing that Boboyev faced a risk of persecution, torture and political pressure if returned. He also said the deportation took place without prior notice to the family.

The case has intensified concerns among human rights advocates over the return of Central Asian asylum seekers to countries where they may face politically motivated prosecution. Germany, like other EU member states, is bound by the principle of non-refoulement, which prohibits returning individuals to places where they risk serious harm, although asylum claims are assessed individually.

The deportation comes as attention also focuses on an Austrian extradition request targeting Tajik asylum seeker Firdavs Shukurov. An opinion article cited by Pamir Inside described the case as part of a broader pattern of transnational repression by Tajik authorities, warning that opposition activists abroad face surveillance, extradition requests and possible prosecution after being returned.

The latest cases are expected to increase scrutiny of European asylum and extradition decisions involving Tajik opposition figures, with rights advocates urging governments to carefully assess the risks of torture, unfair trials and politically motivated prosecution before approving returns.

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