The newspaper said its information was obtained from refugee councils in several German states.
Interior ministries across Germany’s federal states have declined to provide precise figures on the number of Afghans in this situation.
After the Taliban returned to power in 2021, Germany suspended deportations to Afghanistan because of the humanitarian situation and human rights concerns. Deportations resumed in autumn 2024 but were limited to convicted criminals and individuals considered security threats.
The current government has so far maintained the same policy. However, its coalition agreement envisages extending deportations in future to include people with no criminal convictions or security-related concerns.
In recent weeks, German Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt reached an agreement with the Taliban on the deportation of Afghan nationals and, in return, agreed to increase the number of Taliban diplomats in Germany.
According to Taz, four of the five Afghans currently awaiting deportation are being held in Bavaria, while one is detained in Hesse. Another Afghan national who had been held at a deportation detention centre in Lower Saxony was released on Tuesday.
The Lower Saxony Refugee Council said he was released because the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees had made an error in serving an official decision.
The newspaper reported that the cases share notable similarities, with all of the individuals coming under the attention of the federal police after returning to Germany from trips abroad. Taz also reported a recent change in the federal police’s approach towards Afghan nationals, although Germany’s Interior Ministry denied the claim.
Meanwhile, the German government on Wednesday responded to parliamentary questions from Clara Bünger regarding cooperation with the Taliban. However, Taz reported that the government did not provide clear answers to many of the questions and, in some cases, declined to comment, citing “state interests”.
Bünger also said information concerning cooperation between German authorities and the Taliban was being classified or withheld from the public.
The German government also said it had deported 87 Afghan nationals between 1 January and 19 June 2026. Of those, 77 were returned on three charter flights and 10 on scheduled commercial flights. The three charter flights cost more than €1.06 million.