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9 Apr, 2025 15:36

Germany freezes major refugee program – media

Berlin has halted admitting immigration applicants who claim they need protection, amid government coalition talks, DPA has reported
Germany freezes major refugee program – media

Germany has temporarily suspended its participation in a UN refugee resettlement program, the DPA news agency has reported, citing the country’s Interior Ministry. Under the scheme, the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) asks host countries to take in asylum seekers who are deemed in particular need of protection.

The results of the snap general election in February suggest that anti-immigration sentiments in Germany appear to have grown, following a series of violent incidents perpetrated by foreign nationals in recent months. The center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and the right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD), which both advocate tougher migration policies, emerged as the most popular parties.

In an article on Tuesday, the DPA reported that Berlin had attributed its decision to freeze new refugee admissions to ongoing coalition government negotiations between the CDU and the Social Democratic Party (SPD). According to the media outlet, exceptions will be made for asylum seekers whose proceedings are already well advanced.

The two political parties have reportedly agreed to terminate existing voluntary refugee admission programs and not to commit to new programs.

Germany has pledged to the UNHCR and the European Commission to host 13,100 asylum seekers in 2024 and 2025, DPA reported, adding that 5,061 of those individuals have already arrived in the country.

Early last month, Der Spiegel, citing a study by the European Union Agency for Asylum (EUAA), alleged that Germany, which has for years been the top destination for asylum seekers in the EU, witnessed a considerable drop in new applications in 2024. The apparent downward trend coincided with the German government’s decision to expand border controls with EU neighbors, including Poland, Austria, and the Czech Republic.

Ukrainians comprised nearly 20% of applicants rejected by German authorities, according to a RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland (RND) report in February, citing the federal government.

According to government statistics released in September 2024, the total number of refugees living in Germany stood at nearly 3,5 million in June of that year.

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