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Ahmed is on the move.

From a sun-bleached phone screen, he explains he’s running from Germany after being threatened with deportation.

His target destination: the UK.

“I want to go to the UK because I’m afraid of the deportation in Germany. Already they try to deport me and that’s why I left,” he says in a video message.

It’s hurriedly recorded somewhere on the coast of northern France.

In a few hours, he expects to get the signal from smugglers that they will try to cross the channel in a dinghy.

It’s his second attempt in just a few days.

Ahmed speaks via video call
Image:
Ahmed speaks via video call

His first attempt failed after French police caught the group trying to pick up more passengers and slashed their dinghy.

Ahmed is one of a number of Iraqi Kurds Sky News teams have met recently who’ve paid smugglers to get to the UK after Germany toughened its deportation rules.

Rishi Sunak‘s Illegal Migration Act, which created powers to send asylum seekers to Rwanda, hasn’t put them off.

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Germany announced tougher laws in an attempt to reduce illegal migration.

“I’m not afraid about Rwanda or even about crossing the water because I’m looking for a better place to live,” Ahmed says. “I’m very sure if the deportation doesn’t stop in Germany, all the refugees in Germany will cross the border to UK.”

Asylum applications in Germany rocketed to their highest rate since 2016 last year as more the 351,000 people arrived – around four times the amount coming to the UK.

In an attempt to reduce illegal migration, the German government announced tougher laws.

The new measures include faster decisions on asylum applications, restricted benefits and speedier deportations.

Authorities also have more powers when conducting searches and can hold people for up to 28 days ahead of return flights.

Deportations are up around a third on the same period last year with more than 6,300 people deported between January and April, according to official statistics.

Outside the Iraqi embassy in Berlin, we meet a group of protestors who say they’re already feeling the effects of the new laws.

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Protesters outside the Iraq embassy in Berlin
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Protesters outside the Iraqi embassy in Berlin

Many have lived in Germany for years, some given temporary leave to remain, but have recently been told Iraq is safe to return to and it’s time to leave.

“Some of my friends have been deported. The police raided the house at two or three in the morning,” Goran tells me.

He says he’s noticed a rise in people having their asylum claims rejected.

“I’m scared and can’t sleep in my own home,” he says.

He shows me a card which registers him as severely disabled with the Germany authorities.

Both his legs have been amputated and he says he can’t live in Iraq.

Goran outside the Iraqi embassy in Berlin
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Goran says he’s noticed a rise in people having their asylum claims rejected

I ask if he thinks people will flee to other countries such as France and the UK if deportations keep on rising.

“For sure, smuggling will increase,” he replies. “People who feel their lives are politically threatened back in Iraq will try any way possible to reach another country.”

Another lady shows us the medicine she relies on, which she says is hard to get in Iraq.

“They know that my country is not safe,” she says. “I own videos of the killings, robbery and kidnapping of women.”

The group holds up pictures of people they say are victims of deportation – a man injured as he tried to flee, and another they claim died at sea on a smuggler’s boat.

The German government says the deportations are in line with international law.

The woman tells us medication would be hard to get in Iraq
Image:
One woman told us medication would be hard to get in Iraq

A spokesperson from the interior ministry said in a statement: “The Act to Improve Repatriation, which came into force on 27 February 2024, contains numerous and extensive improvements in order to be able to enforce an obligation to leave the country even more effectively in future.

“Co-operation with Iraq takes place in a so-called non-contractual procedure in accordance with the principle of international law, according to which every state is obliged to take back its own citizens informally if they have no right of residence in the host country.”

In a kitchen in southern Germany, we listen as our phone call to Kurdistan rings.

A young man answers.

Hama, not his real name, tells us he was deported to Iraq at the end of April.

He explains there were 25 immigrants on his deportation flight and 90 officers guarding them.

A deportation flight taking off in Germany
Image:
A deportation flight leaving Germany

He claims his life is at risk in Kurdistan so he is in now in hiding.

“How did you feel on the flight home?” I ask.

“Very, very bad,” he says. “It’s not safe, I cannot go outside.”

Hama is now indefinitely separated from his wife Shaida, who is Iranian and was given asylum in Germany.

Time ran out before they could gather the paperwork to prove they were legally married.

Shaida is devastated.

“We didn’t sleep for 10 days. It’s very hard to see him like this because I feel like they took something from us,” she says.

“Germany, how can they say they are a democratic country? My husband didn’t do anything wrong. He was on a course learning German and he was working.”

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Party leaders on migration crisis

Following the 2015 migrant crisis, Germany’s then chancellor Angela Merkel announced an “open door policy” and took in more than a million refugees fleeing war in Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq.

She defended the decision, saying it was an “extraordinary situation”, but the migration policy outraged some voters and led to a surge in support for the far-right Alternative for Germany.

The policy was later abandoned but Germany remains one of the largest refugee-hosting countries in the world.

Faced with surging asylum applications last year, the current Chancellor Olaf Scholz agreed an “historic” stricter migration policy.

The chancellor is now under pressure to do more following the recent gains by the far right in the EU elections.

German state leaders have demanded he makes “proposals for effective control” ahead of a meeting on Thursday.

This month, after a police officer died following an attack by a failed asylum seeker, he pledged to tighten rules so the glorification of terrorist offences can be sufficient grounds for deportation.

He also said the government was working on ways to deport criminals and dangerous migrants back to countries such as Afghanistan and Syria.

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I ask Shaida if she agrees when politicians say nations have to have a limit and can’t grant every asylum application they receive.

“I accept what you’re saying but Germany doesn’t know how to do it fairly,” she replies.

Shaida shows me pictures of herself in her wedding dress standing by her husband in the German countryside.

It could be years before the man she loves is allowed to return.

Germany’s open door period is a distant memory.

As for Ahmed – he’s now in the UK.

After several failed attempts, including one when the French police cleared the beach with tear gas, he managed to slip away on a dinghy and into British waters.

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UK stops some intelligence sharing with US over boat strikes in Caribbean

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UK stops some intelligence sharing with US over boat strikes in Caribbean

The UK has stopped sharing some intelligence with the US on suspected drug trafficking boats in the Caribbean following concerns over America’s strikes against the vessels.

The US has reported carrying out 14 strikes since September on boats near the Venezuelan coast.

The death toll from the US attacks in the Pacific and the Caribbean Sea has risen to more than 70, as the US escalates a military build-up in the Caribbean Sea.

Downing Street did not deny reporting by CNN that the UK is withholding intelligence from the US to avoid being complicit in US military strikes it believes may breach international law.

Britain, which controls several territories in the Caribbean where it bases intelligence assets, has long assisted the US in identifying vessels suspected of smuggling narcotics based on intelligence gathered in its overseas territories in the region.

The USS Gravely destroyer arrives to dock for military exercises in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad and Tobago on 26 October (AP Photo/Robert Taylor)
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The USS Gravely destroyer arrives to dock for military exercises in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad and Tobago on 26 October (AP Photo/Robert Taylor)

That information helped the US Coast Guard locate the ships, seize the drugs and detain their crews, CNN cited sources as saying.

But since the Trump administration started carrying out strikes on alleged drug trafficking boats in early September, UK officials have become concerned their intelligence may be used to acquire targets for the attacks they believe may be illegal.

The intelligence-sharing pause began more than a month ago, CNN reported, quoting sources as saying Britain shares UN’s human rights chief Volker Turk’s assessment that the strikes amount to extrajudicial killing.

The reports could provide an awkward backdrop for a meeting between Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper and her US counterpart Marco Rubio, expected on Wednesday at the G7 foreign ministerial summit in Canada.

A Number 10 spokesman did not deny the move when asked about the pause in intelligence sharing.

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“We don’t comment on security or intelligence matters,” the official said in response to repeated questions.

“The US is our closest partner on defence, security and intelligence, but in line with a long-standing principle, I’m just not going to comment on intelligence matters.”

He added that “decisions on this are a matter for the US” and that “issues around whether or not anything is against international law is a matter for a competent international court, not for governments to determine”.

A Pentagon official told CNN the department “doesn’t talk about intelligence matters”.

On Monday, US secretary of war Pete Hegseth said on X that the previous day, “two lethal kinetic strikes were conducted on two vessels operated by Designated Terrorist Organizations”.

He said: “These vessels were known by our intelligence to be associated with illicit narcotics smuggling, were carrying narcotics, and were transiting along a known narco-trafficking transit route in the Eastern Pacific.

“Both strikes were conducted in international waters and 3 male narco-terrorists were aboard each vessel. All 6 were killed. No U.S. forces were harmed.”

The United Nations human rights chief has described the US strikes on alleged drug dealers off the coast of South America as “unacceptable” and a violation of international human rights law.

Venezuela says they are illegal, amount to murder and are aggression against the sovereign South American nation.

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Hundreds of Russian troops roll into key frontline Ukrainian city ‘Mad Max-style’, video appears to show

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Hundreds of Russian troops roll into key frontline Ukrainian city 'Mad Max-style', video appears to show

Hundreds of Russian troops have pushed deeper into eastern Ukrainian cities ‘Mad Max-style’, video released by the Russians appears to show.

The troops were seen rolling through the fog on motorbikes, with some on the roofs of battered cars and vans, apparently into the city of Pokrovsk, as Russia said its forces had also pressed further into Kupiansk on Tuesday.

Ukraine has acknowledged the presence of the troops on its territory, although Reuters news agency says that when the video was shot is yet to be verified.

The fight to gain hold of Pokrovsk, a strategic point on a large road and rail artery in the Donetsk region, has been raging for well over a year, in Vladimir Putin’s push to gain control of the whole of Ukraine’s industrial east.

Situation on the battlefield
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Situation on the battlefield

The Donbas region comprises the neighbouring regions of Luhansk and Donetsk.

Ukraine’s military said around 300 Russian soldiers were now inside Pokrovsk and that Moscow had intensified efforts to get more troops in over the past few days – using dense fog for cover from drones.

It said Ukrainian forces were fighting Russian groups in the city.

Russian soldiers enter Pokrovsk in this screen grab obtained from a social media video released on 10 November, 2025. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Russian soldiers enter Pokrovsk in this screen grab obtained from a social media video released on 10 November, 2025. Pic: Reuters

Moscow says taking Pokrovsk, dubbed “the gateway to Donetsk” by Russian media, would give it a platform to push north towards the two largest remaining Ukrainian-controlled cities in the Donetsk region – Kramatorsk and Sloviansk.

Posting on X on Tuesday, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said: “The front: our main focus right now is on the Pokrovsk direction and the Zaporizhzhia region, where the Russians are increasing the number and scale of assaults.

“The situation there remains difficult, in part because of weather conditions that favor the attacks. But we continue to destroy the occupier, and I thank every one of our units, every warrior involved in defending Ukraine’s positions.”

Destruction in Pokrovsk on 1 November. Pic: AP
Image:
Destruction in Pokrovsk on 1 November. Pic: AP

Moscow and Kyiv have given different accounts of the battle for Pokrovsk. Moscow has for days said the city is surrounded, while Kyiv has denied Moscow controls the city and said on Monday that it was still able to supply neighbouring Myrnohrad.

Moscow has been threatening Pokrovsk for more than a year, attempting to surround it and threaten supply lines, rather than use the deadly frontal assaults it used to take the city of Bakhmut in 2023.

Russian war bloggers published a video on Tuesday showing what they said were Russian forces entering Pokrovsk along a road enveloped in fog, in what some Telegram users said looked like scenes from the Mad Max action film series, many of which are set in a post-apocalyptic landscape.

The date of the footage has not been independently verified.

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Satellite image shows armoured vehicles in the eastern Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk, Donetsk region, on 3 November, 2025. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Satellite image shows armoured vehicles in the eastern Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk, Donetsk region, on 3 November, 2025. Pic: Reuters

Russia said it had taken 256 buildings and that Moscow’s forces were actively advancing to the northwest and east of Pokrovsk as well as around the railway station.

Russia has executed a pincer movement around the city and was close to closing it, open-source battlefield maps from both sides show, though Kyiv has counter-attacked around the town of Dobropillia.

Ukraine’s top military commander, Oleksandr Syrskyi, said in an interview with the New York Post that Russia was concentrating some 150,000 troops in a push to capture Pokrovsk, with mechanised groups and marine brigades forming part of this drive.

Russia said its forces had taken full control of the eastern part of Kupiansk in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region. A Russian commander, who gave his call sign as Hunter, said his troops had taken control of an oil depot on the eastern edge of Kupiansk.

In a video statement issued by Russia’s defence ministry, he said his forces had also taken control of a series of train stops along the railway to Kupiansk Vuzlovyi, a settlement around 6km (4 miles) south of the centre of Kupiansk itself.

Russia also said its troops had taken control of the settlement of Novouspenivske in the southeastern Zaporizhzhia region.

Ukraine withdrew from some villages, including Novouspenivske, due to intense attacks involving more than 400 artillery strikes per day, RBC-Ukraine news agency cited a military spokesperson as saying.

Russia’s military says it now controls more than 19% of Ukraine, or some 116,000 square km (44,800 square miles), up from 18% nearly three years ago, according to Ukrainian maps tracking frontline changes.

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Dozens of protesters storm COP30 venue in Brazil

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Dozens of protesters storm COP30 venue in Brazil

Dozens of protesters have forced their way into the COP30 climate summit venue and clashed with security guards at the entrance.

Shouting angrily, the protesters demanded access to the UN compound where thousands of delegates from nations around the world are attending this year’s UN climate summit.

Some waved flags with slogans calling for land rights or carried signs, saying “our land is not for sale”.

An indigenous leader from the Tupinamba community near the lower reaches of the Tapajos River in Brazil told Reuters that they were upset about ongoing development in the forest.

“We can’t eat money,” said Gilmar, who uses only one name.

Security guards pushed the protesters back and used tables to barricade the entrance.

A Reuters witness saw one security guard being rushed away in a wheelchair while clutching his stomach.

Another guard with a fresh cut above his eye told the news agency he had been hit in the head by a heavy drumstick thrown from the crowd. Security confiscated several batons.

The protesters dispersed shortly after the clash.

They had been in a group of hundreds who marched to the venue in the Amazon city of Belem.

Security guards later allowed delegates to exit the venue, having earlier asked them to move back inside until the area was clear.

COP30, which started on 10 November and ends on 21 November, comes at a precarious time for climate action.

The conference has been met with controversy over its location in the Brazilian city, on the outskirts of the Amazon rainforest.

Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has highlighted Indigenous communities as key players in COP30 negotiations.

Dozens of Indigenous leaders arrived earlier this week by boat to take part in the talks and demand more say in how forests are managed.

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