
Only hours before Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s plane touches down in Ankara, Human Rights Watch (HRW) published a scathing open letter warning Berlin against “turning a blind eye” to Turkey’s authoritarian drift in exchange for migration cooperation. The NGO cites the jailing of Istanbul mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu and a draft law that would criminalise LGBTQ expression as evidence of democratic back-sliding. HRW says the EU’s largest economy has “outsized influence” and should condition any deportation pact on concrete human-rights benchmarks.
The timing puts Merz in a diplomatic squeeze. Domestically, his Christian-Democratic-Social-Democratic coalition is under pressure to show results on deportations; internationally, Germany champions rule-of-law values. HRW’s statement echoes criticism levelled at UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer earlier this week after he signed a defence deal with Ankara without public rights comments.
Businesses eyeing Turkey as a manufacturing or logistics hub should pay attention. If Berlin links migration deals to rights concerns, negotiations could drag on, affecting visa issuance for Turkish managers and technicians. Conversely, ignoring rights issues could spark opposition from Germany’s influential civil society, potentially leading to legal challenges against deportations.
The German Foreign Office noted that Merz will “raise all issues of bilateral importance,” but stopped short of pledging a public stance. Observers expect heated debate in the Bundestag upon his return, especially from Green and liberal MPs who back a values-based foreign policy.
For mobility managers, the episode is a reminder that deportation and readmission agreements increasingly intertwine with broader diplomatic agendas, creating new layers of geopolitical risk for cross-border talent deployment.
The timing puts Merz in a diplomatic squeeze. Domestically, his Christian-Democratic-Social-Democratic coalition is under pressure to show results on deportations; internationally, Germany champions rule-of-law values. HRW’s statement echoes criticism levelled at UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer earlier this week after he signed a defence deal with Ankara without public rights comments.
Businesses eyeing Turkey as a manufacturing or logistics hub should pay attention. If Berlin links migration deals to rights concerns, negotiations could drag on, affecting visa issuance for Turkish managers and technicians. Conversely, ignoring rights issues could spark opposition from Germany’s influential civil society, potentially leading to legal challenges against deportations.
The German Foreign Office noted that Merz will “raise all issues of bilateral importance,” but stopped short of pledging a public stance. Observers expect heated debate in the Bundestag upon his return, especially from Green and liberal MPs who back a values-based foreign policy.
For mobility managers, the episode is a reminder that deportation and readmission agreements increasingly intertwine with broader diplomatic agendas, creating new layers of geopolitical risk for cross-border talent deployment.








