Rejections at the German border imminent

(de-news.net) – Migrants who are fit and able to work and who are not impaired in health may be deported to Greece, according to a ruling by the Federal Administrative Court in Leipzig. While there are deficiencies in the Greek reception system due to the complex administrative system, the judges found that the migrants are not at risk of extreme hardship. For example, it is possible to obtain accommodation, access to food, and employment. A stateless male migrant and a Somali man filed the lawsuit. They had received temporary residence permits in Greece, which is why their asylum applications in Germany were rejected.

Meanwhile, CSU General Secretary Martin Huber predicts imminent rejections at the German border. The issue of migration will be addressed within the first four weeks after Friedrich Merz (CDU) and the new government take office. Talks with neighboring European countries are already underway. However, Huber also promised a more far-reaching migration policy agenda before the Bundestag’s summer recess in Berlin, including border controls, deportations to Syria and Afghanistan, a halt to voluntary admission programs and family reunification, and the introduction of payment cards. This was intended to stop illegal migration.

Huber criticized Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock (Greens) for not feeling bound by promises to Afghans to accept them in Germany. Hardly any local personnel who had provided support to the Bundeswehr were being brought to Germany. Voluntary admission programs were harmful, the CSU politician explained.

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