EU Germany to Tighten Border Controls as Anti-Immigrant Parties Gain Votes - "and we are continuing to pursue a hard line against irregular migration,” The borders will be patrolled " for at least six months."


The government said it would expand patrols as part of a ‘hard line’ on illegal migration following two deadly stabbings by rejected asylum seekers and a surge in support for the far right.

The German government announced Monday that it would expand border patrols in a bid to stop illegal crossings, after four people were killed in two attacks by rejected asylum seekers this year and anti-immigrant parties made substantial gains in two state elections.

“We are strengthening our domestic security through concrete action and we are continuing to pursue a hard line against irregular migration,” Nancy Faeser, the country’s interior minister, said in Berlin on Monday.

The move comes amid significant political pressure, not just from the far right — which got nearly a third of the votes in two state elections earlier this month — but from the mainstream conservative opposition party and a general perception that the government has lost control of the issue.

Starting next Monday, the federal police will add patrols on Germany’s normally open borders to France, Luxembourg, Belgium, the Netherlands and Denmark for at least six months.

Southern and eastern borders — those with Switzerland, Austria, the Czech Republic, and Poland — have already been patrolled since at least last year. All the countries are in Europe’s Schengen area, which normally allows for free movement across borders without stops.

The stepped-up patrols have included such things as selective traffic stops and passport checks on cross-border trains. The government has said that 30,000 people were turned away at the southern and eastern borders since border patrols there were instituted.

The announcement was another step away from former Chancellor Angela Merkel’s decision in 2015 to let more than a million refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, in to claim asylum, and the willingness of the current government, led by Olaf Scholz, to take in 1.2 million Ukrainians fleeing the February 2022 Russian invasion.

It also shows the extent to which the question of migration has dominated political discussion in Germany. The country needs immigration to bolster its aging work force, but the government often finds itself on the defensive against increasingly influential extremist parties.

Some 44 percent of respondents to a poll released last week said that migration and refugees are Germany’s most pressing problem — the most for any issue. Some 77 percent of respondents to the poll, which was paid for by a public broadcaster and the Welt newspaper, said Germany needed a change in asylum policies.

Two separate stabbing attacks by rejected asylum seekers with ties to the Islamic State in two western cities this year — one of which killed a police officer in Mannheim in May, and another which killed three visitors to a public event called the “Festival of Diversity” in Solingen in August — have added fuel to the fire.

Presenting her new plan, Ms. Faeser said Monday that it served “to further limit irregular migration and to protect against the acute dangers posed by Islamist terrorism and serious crime.”

The announcement came a day before government coalition partners and the main opposition are to meet to discuss tightening Germany’s asylum laws. Friedrich Merz, the pugnacious leader of the opposition, threatened to skip Tuesday’s meeting unless the government committed to significant action ahead of time.

What is not yet clear is whether the police will start turning away refugees who make an asylum claim at the border.

The Syrian man who the authorities believe carried out the stabbing attack in Solingen should have been deported to Bulgaria, where he first entered the European Union. The fact that he wasn’t has led opposition politicians — including Mr. Merz — to demand that even those claiming asylum be sent back to the E.U. country where the person first set foot in the bloc.

Other politicians have called for an upper limit of 100,000 asylum claims per year, although it remains unclear how German or E.U. law — which requires every refugee claim to be heard — would allow such a limitation. Last year, Germany registered 324,636 asylum claims.
Anton Hofreiter, a European policy expert with the Green party, which has generally been the most resistant to measures directed at curbing migrant numbers, warned that such a move could make it harder for E.U. countries to work together.
“With ever more far-reaching demands, you risk the cohesion of the European Union, you risk the internal market and you risk millions of jobs,” Ms. Hofreiter told Welt TV, a broadcaster.
 
This is just to hobble AfD. These policies will be withdrawn a couple years later after AfD is weakened so more migrants can be let in.

Personally, I wouldn't trust this policy unless all the concentration camps were opened up and all the refugees / migrants since 2000 were liquidated.
 
Let's see if this will actually have any sizable impact on the number of illegal immigrants entering, but I don't have high hopes for it
Of course it won't, they've already done it before. I'm from a country that neighbors Germany. Here's what happened the last time:

German cops were stopping cars at certain border crossings. Not all of them, just some. All of the cars they stopped had obvious Europeans in them, but with non-German plates. If the pigs were bored, they'd force some poor family going on vacation to unload every single thing from the car and then they'd go through it, in some cases even tearing up the upholstery to check if Przemysl or Josef were hiding a dozen sandniggers under the trunk floor of their Opel Astra. Meanwhile, minivans with blacked out windows driven by shifty looking middle easterners were passing through even those guarded crossings unmolested, and even if they got cold feet within 20 km from each of these crossings was another one that was completely unattended.
 
The hypocrisy is on full display...

Poland's Tusk criticises German decision to tighten border controls
Reuters (archive.ph)
By Barbara Erling
2024-09-10 14:58:48GMT
WARSAW, Sept 10 (Reuters) - Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk criticised a decision by Germany to tighten controls on its land borders, calling on Tuesday for urgent consultations with other affected countries and more support for Warsaw's own immigration policies.

Relations between Poland and Germany have become warmer since Tusk's pro-European coalition came to power in December, but there is exasperation in Warsaw at Berlin's reluctance to commit to joint European Union financing for defence and strengthening the bloc's eastern border.

Poland has been facing what it says is a migrant crisis orchestrated by Belarus and Russia on its eastern border since 2021.

With Germany seeking to toughen its stance on immigration following a surge in arrivals, Berlin on Monday announced plans to impose tighter controls at all of the country's land borders, which would normally be part of the Schengen free-movement zone, for six months starting on Sept. 16.

"Such actions are unacceptable from the Polish point of view," Tusk told a meeting of Polish ambassadors in Warsaw.

"Today we need full support from Germany and the entire EU when it comes to help in organising, financing, arming the eastern border, also in the context of illegal migration."

He said that what Poland needed was not tighter controls on its border with Germany, but more engagement from Berlin and others in securing the EU's external border.

"In the coming hours we will contact other countries affected by Berlin's decisions for urgent consultations on action on the EU level," he said.

The German interior ministry did not immediately reply to an emailed request for comment.

Tusk said that the decision was a reaction to failed German policies on immigration from the past, not to failures from Poland's side.

Recent deadly knife attacks in Germany in which the suspects were asylum seekers have stoked concerns over immigration.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for a knife attack in the western city of Solingen that killed three people in August.

Germany's AfD earlier this month became the first far-right party since World War Two to win a state election, in Thuringia, after campaigning heavily on the issue of migration.

Reporting by Barbara Erling, Alan Charlish, Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk in Warsaw, Miranda Murray in Berlin; Editing by Hugh Lawson

Poland to extend no-go zone on Belarus border for 90 days
Reuters (archive.ph)
By Reuters Staff
2024-09-10 15:50:59GMT
WARSAW, Sept 10 (Reuters) - Poland will extend the implementation of a buffer zone on its border with Belarus for 90 days, the interior ministry said on Tuesday, adding that the measure had been effective in reducing illegal migration.

Prime Minister Donald Tusk's pro-European coalition government reintroduced a no-go zone on a 60-kilometre (37 mile) stretch of the border in June after a surge in attempts by migrants to cross and a string of violent incidents, one of which resulted in a soldier being killed.

The border has been a flashpoint since migrants started flocking there in 2021, after Belarus, a close Russian ally, reportedly opened travel agencies in the Middle East to offer a new unofficial route into Europe - a move the European Union said was designed to create a crisis.

"The zone has brought concrete, positive results," Interior Minister Tomasz Siemoniak said in a statement. "It is primarily aimed at people smugglers who pick up people who are smuggled across the border."

The interior ministry said the number of attempts to cross the border illegally had fallen by 64% since the zone was introduced. The extension will come into effect on Wednesday.

Human rights organisations have criticised the policy, saying it impedes efforts by aid workers to help migrants, including women and children, trapped on the border.

Poland's nationalist opposition Law and Justice (PiS) party accused the government of hypocrisy for introducing a buffer zone after having criticised the policy while in opposition.

Tusk said on Tuesday Poland needed more support in its efforts to secure the eastern frontier, as he criticised a German decision to tighten controls on its land borders.

Reporting by Alan Charlish, Marek Strzelecki Editing by Gareth Jones
 
If you use the magic world Asylum you will just be let in. So the only effect that this will have is that a couple of people with outstanding warrants will be caught.

The rest can still enter the country. With current deportation rates it takes Germany ten years to deport one year worth of immigration. So if current trends continue, Germany will be Islamic by the end of the century. Probably sooner since Muslims don't need a majority to take over since only a small minority would actually oppose them.
 
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They’re just shitting themselves that they’re losing power to a one issue opposition party. This is just a desperate attempt to say ‘shut up and don’t vote for those guys’ after already ruining the country. Well it’s a little too late and other countries should heed this warning but something tells me they’re not going to stop.
 
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It's another big nothingburger. They don't even have remotely the personnel to keep control of the borders, they couldn't do it even if they meant to and Faeser has already stated it's just for a few months (so it won't make any difference anyway). They just put on a performance, a big public palaver for the media that will be forgotten once the agitation about the recent knife attacks has died down. They just pretend to take the issue seriously and act now so the AfD and BSW won't gain even more support. Just like they quickly deported a few scapegoats, a ridiculously small number, for appeasement. The guys are probably already back.
 
Without a final solution to the mongrels already inside, this means fucking nothing. It's just an attempt to appease the far right voters who have such hard stances like "I do love niggers and worship them, but could we bring a few less?"
 
The hypocrisy is on full display...

Poland's Tusk criticises German decision to tighten border controls

Poland to extend no-go zone on Belarus border for 90 days
Donald Tusk has for a very long time been called a leftist german/eu tool in Poland. Ten years ago when his original government became unpopular, he basically fled to Brussels where he was given some unelected seat of power and has returned relatively recently when the opposition party proved even more incompetent and he gained popularity again.
Entire polish policy with Germany is dictated solely by what can give Poland more gibsmedat from them and as such closing the border with it is seen in bad light.

Either way Germany locking its borders seem retarded now when they still import them by tens of thousands via legal means and EU has barely any controls at all to the south from where niggers and muslims actually come from and once in the EU, they can more or less freely travel everywhere.
 
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