The German government has announced its intentions to make adjustments to the asylum procedure.
The government is considering transferring asylum seekers to Africa, according to Joachim Stamp, the Special Commissioner for Migration of Germany. Additionally, Olaf Scholz, the chancellor of Germany, commanded that the government begin expelling citizens without legal status. In accordance with Stamp, refugees saved in the Mediterranean may be sent to North Africa while their applications for asylum are being adjudicated.
German authorities have
previously proposed transferring asylum procedures to another country, but
these plans have not been implemented due to legal challenges and a lack of
cooperation from African states. The current government has affirmed its
commitment to reviewing the situation and seeing if there is a possibility to
send asylum seekers to a third country until a decision on their application is
made. Chancellor Scholz also said that countries of origin should start taking
back rejected asylum seekers.
"If Germany
guarantees protection to people who are persecuted, those who cannot claim this
protection must go back to their home countries." "The prerequisite
for this is that the home countries also take back their compatriots, and this
is something that is often still lacking," Scholz stated.
Scholz emphasized that Germany would maintain access to legal immigration pathways to allow skilled employees from other countries to enter Germany without having to comply with onerous new regulations. The German government intends to relax its strict requirements for foreigners who want to work there in order to fill employment openings.
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