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Poland Steps Up Deportations of Foreign Nationals After Breaches of Law — Including Pakistani Citizens
Poland’s border guards and immigration authorities have intensified removal operations against foreign nationals found to be in violation of Polish law, part of a broader government crackdown on illegal migration and breaches of conduct rules.
Recent Deportations of Pakistani Nationals
In early February 2026, the Polish Border Guard carried out an officially announced deportation operation that saw 25 Pakistani citizens removed from Poland after being found to have breached legal rules during their stay in the country. Government officials described the action as the latest in a series of enforcement measures aimed at those who fail to comply with Polish law.
Interior and Administration Minister Marcin Kierwiński highlighted that such deportations are part of a wider policy of “zero tolerance” for legal violations by non-citizens, noting that close to 900 foreign nationals were deported by air on enforcement orders in 2025 alone — though this total encompassed multiple nationalities and cases, not solely Pakistani citizens.
The individuals removed were flown out of Poland through a coordinated operation involving the Polish Border Guard and military aviation units. Prior to deportation, administrative return orders had been issued and carried out after compulsory enforcement measures were applied.
Broader Enforcement Context
Poland has been tightening immigration enforcement and deportation efforts in recent years as part of a policy shift designed to reinforce border control, discourage illegal entry and overstays, and uphold public order. In 2025 authorities were reported to have carried out hundreds of deportations of foreign nationals — including those deemed security risks or in breach of immigration rules — both independently and in cooperation with European Union agencies.
Pakistani nationals have featured in broader border enforcement data, including at the Poland–Belarus frontier, where officials have intercepted significant numbers of would-be migrants attempting irregular crossings — illustrating the ongoing pressure along external EU borders and the challenges of managing migration flows.
Local and International Reactions
Authorities in Warsaw maintain that rigorous enforcement of immigration and public order rules — including deportations for legal violations — is consistent with national interests and security priorities. However, such operations often attract scrutiny from human rights groups and legal advocates, particularly when concerns arise over due process, access to asylum procedures, and compliance with international protections for people fleeing persecution.
For example, debates have at times emerged over the handling of returns where asylum claims may not have been fully processed or evaluated. These discussions reflect broader tensions across Europe over migration policy, border management, and compliance with both national and international law. (Note: reporting available on related procedural and human rights discussions but not directly linked to the specific recent Pakistani deportations.)
What’s Not Confirmed
While broader migration reports sometimes cite large cumulative numbers of deportations of Pakistani nationals from multiple countries globally, including Gulf nations, there is no verified reporting confirming that Poland has deported exactly 4,800 Pakistani nationals in a single operation or as a single category. Figures reported by Pakistan’s National Assembly and other sources referring to tens of thousands of deportations relate to multiple host countries and contexts, not exclusively to Poland.
Attached is a news article regarding deportations of Pakistan nationals from Poland
Article written and configured by Christopher Stanley
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