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  Germany approves tougher asylum rules

Germany approves tougher asylum rules

REUTERS/AFP
Published : Feb 26, 2016, 6:26 am IST
Updated : Feb 26, 2016, 6:26 am IST

The German Parliament on Thursday approved new measures to tighten asylum rules in an effort to stem an unprecedented influx of migrants.

The German Parliament on Thursday approved new measures to tighten asylum rules in an effort to stem an unprecedented influx of migrants.

The package, which includes measures such as restricting family reunions for some migrants, was approved with a large majority of 429 votes to 147 against.

The new rules also lower the hurdles for the expulsion of convicted foreigners — a key measure proposed after the New Year’s rampage in Cologne, where hundreds of women reported being sexually assaulted and robbed in a crowd of mostly migrant men.

Chancellor Angela Merkel has come under intense pressure to reduce the number of asylum seekers in Germany, which saw an influx of around 1.1 million in 2015.

Under the new rules, some migrants will be blocked from bringing their families to join them in Germany for two years.

The measure applies to some rejected asylum seekers who still cannot be expelled because they risk torture or the death penalty in their own country.

The asylum application process would also be sped up, with centres set up to process applications from “economic migrants” who have little prospect of winning refugee status.

Berlin’s aim in gathering these applicants in specific centres is to facilitate their quick repatriation, to free up resources for war refugees who urgently need protection.

Meanwhile, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban hit out Thursday at Germany’s “rude and aggressive” tone over Europe’s refugee crisis and its proposals for national migrant quotas, which he has vehemently opposed.

“Today, the tone from Germany is gruff, rude and aggressive,” Mr Orban, a strident critic of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s liberal refugee policy, told Bild daily.

“Germany’s refugee policy is not without alternative,” the Hungarian leader said in remarks published a day after he announced a referendum on whether to accept mandatory EU quotas for migrants.

The hardline leader is deeply opposed to an EU plan to distribute 160,000 asylum-seekers among member states under a quota system.

“The quotas will change the profile of Europe, from an ethnic, cultural and religious point of view,” he argued in a lengthy interview.

Mr Orban also warned that an uncontrolled migrant influx exposed Europe to the risks of “terrorism, criminality, anti-Semitism and homophobia”.

Pointing to the New Year’s debacle in western Germany’s Cologne, where hundreds of women reported being groped in a crowd of migrants, Mr Orban said: “I have four daughters and I don’t want my children to grow up in a world where Cologne could happen”. For him, even a deal struck by the EU and Turkey, the main launch pad for migrant sea crossings to Europe, to reduce the number of arrivals was unrealistic.

Location: Germany, Berliini, Berlin