Ahmad went to the Nobel Gymnasium and read to nurses, but came to Sweden a week late to be covered by the so-called high school law which would mean a new chance for unaccompanied people to obtain a residence permit. On Tuesday he was deported to Afghanistan.

- It was so awful when we visited Ahmad at the Märsta repository. This guy is so strong. He is so calm, perhaps because he has not been able to take it in yet. He basically said that everything will end anyway. It feels ... not good at all, says Kristoffer Kullberg.

Affect

Although Ahmad has been in custody for the past few months, he has nevertheless tried to finish his education, Kristoffer Kullberg says.

- He got help from his teacher and got some books with him, but it has been difficult for him under all the pressure.

The entire Kullberg family has been affected by Ahmad's deportation process.

- I have two children, eight and ten years, and it is difficult to explain to them why Ahmad should go. It is difficult to explain the decisions that our parliament and government have made these decisions and why he has to go to a country where it is bombed and fought, says Kristoffer Kullberg.

Different assessments

The manifestation at Stora Torget in Karlstad was one of the 21 events in the country which, under the slogan "Circle of silence", criticizes the Migration Board's decision to expel people to a country that the Swedish Embassy does not advise people to travel to.

The Migration Board makes a different assessment of the situation and refers to the situation in the country's various provinces. The Migration Board's press service refers to the authority's legal position when SVT Nyheter Värmland contacts them:

“The Migration Board considers that the security situation in Afghanistan is serious but that it varies within and between different provinces. However, the conflict has not reached the level that must, according to law and practice, apply for everyone from a certain country to stay. The Migration Board has long considered that the situation in Afghanistan is serious and many of them therefore have protection in Sweden. "

Great concern

Kristoffer Kullberg thinks that it is still not safe for Ahmad to go there.

- He has not been an adult in any country other than Sweden. There are so many questions. Will he have clothes on his body? Will he have a roof over his head? Will he have any supplies for the first time?

How has all this affected you?

- A year ago, I did not know what it was like in Afghanistan, but now I have learned so much. I have lived my happy son-in-law's life, but so it happens. It really is for real. Things are really happening down there. Then you want to get involved in their conditions, says Kristoffer Kullberg.