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German Interior Minister Rejects Cap For Migrants

Kazeem Tunde
4 Min Read

German Interior Minister Rejects Cap For Migrants

 

German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser has rejected Bavarian Premier Markus Söder’s proposal for an annual cap on refugees in Germany.

Faeser made this known on German public broadcaster ARD on Sunday evening.

“Upper limits simply cannot be adhered to because we have European law, international law, we cannot reduce the individual right to asylum alone,’’ Faeser said.

“We are bound by the Geneva Refugee Convention, by the European Convention on Human Rights,’’ she said.

Söder, who is also leader of the Bavarian conservative Christian Social Union (CSU) party, called on Chancellor Olaf Scholz to make the issue of migration a top priority.

“The chancellor, who has been silent for weeks, should now get to work on the issue.

“The chancellor must now also show leadership here, and by the way, he must also convince (his coalition partner) the Greens,’’ Söder demanded.

Chancellor Scholz, a Social Democrat (SPD), is in coalition with the Greens and the pro-business Free Democrats (FDP).

Faeser said, that the only thing that would really help was a European solution.

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock on Monday reiterated the need for a European solution in refugee policy.

The situation in the municipalities in Germany is absolutely tense, Baerbock said on Deutschlandfunk public radio on Monday morning.

That is why she and Faeser are working hard so that Europe finally comes to “common regulations in asylum and refugee policy.’’

She said clear rules must be created at the external borders so that people would finally distribute in Europe in an orderly manner.

She referred to fast procedures at the external borders and quick repatriations.

Söder had brought up the idea of an integration limit of about 200,000 refugees.

On the same TV programme as Faeser, he confirmed that the figure of 200,000 was a guideline within which integration in Germany can still succeed.

Söder stressed that he was not in favour of abolishing individual asylum.

“We need a turn towards a sustainable migration policy,’’ he said.

Friedrich Merz, the leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and the CSU’s sister party have called for a limit to the number of refugees that should come to Germany.

“We have to solve this problem, otherwise we will be in over our heads,’’ he told the Monday edition of the Augsburger Allgemeine newspaper.

“If we don’t want to overstretch the population’s willingness to help and our country’s ability to integrate, we have to quickly reduce the numbers of refugees coming to Germany.’’

German municipalities have recently expressed concerns regarding overcrowding.

By the end of August, the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees had registered more than 204,000 initial applications for asylum.

A 77 per cent increase compared to the same period of last year.

In addition, because of the Russian war, more than one million people from Ukraine, who do not have to apply for asylum, sought protection in Germany.

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