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Germany promises more housing for refugees

  • October 12, 2022

Many municipalities in Germany are completely overwhelmed with the accommodation and care of refugees. They have been sounding the alarm to the Ministry of the Interior for some time — they simply need help.

The discussion about how to handle the provide administrative and other necessary support for refugees, hosted by German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser of the center-left Social Democrats (SPD) in Berlin, lasted two hours.

Faeser was not at the event completely of her own accord: cities and municipalities, but also representatives of Germany’s 16 states, had demanded a meeting to address the situation weeks ago. They feel that the government has left them on their own to take care of the reception and support of numerous refugees from Ukraine as well as asylum seekers from other countries.

Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February, around 1 million refugees have been taken in by Germany. In recent months, however, there has also been a renewed increase in the number of asylum seekers heading north via the Mediterranean and the so-called Balkan route.

From January to September 2022, some 135,000 new applications for asylum were submitted to the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees — 35% more than in 2021.

Sports halls and tent cities

More and more municipalities are saying that they simply have no more housing available for refugees. Sports halls are being turned into emergency accommodation.

The situation is comparable to 2015 and 2016, when hundreds of thousands of refugees and asylum-seekers came to Germany as a result of the war in Syria, the vice president of the German Association of Cities, Leipzig Mayor Burkhard Jung, told DW in Berlin.

Two tent cities have already been erected in Leipzig, Jung said, while in Dresden a trade fair hall has had to be used for accommodation.

The burden, it seems, is unevenly distributed. Those who come to Germany from Ukraine can move freely for up to 90 days. Two-thirds of these refugees are housed in private accommodation or have rented their own apartments.

Others mainly go to the big cities. Of the 300 properties made available by the federal government, only 68% are occupied, according to Interior Minister Faeser. There is room available, but mainly in rural areas and smaller towns.

Money won’t be discussed until November

Faeser now wants to make 56 additional federal properties available with 4,000 more places. But sheis unable to offer more money — that is beyond her official remit. 

“It was of course to be expected that the Federal Minister of the Interior did not have a checkbook with her, because the financial negotiations are conducted by the Chancellor with the state premiers,” said the chairman of the Conference of Interior Ministers, the Bavarian Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann (CSU), somewhat jokingly.

In urgent situations, exposition halls like this one may be fitted out for temporary emergency accommodations

He quickly became serious again: “But I want to say again clearly that this is now scheduled for November and it is high time.”

In the spring, the federal government allocated €2 billion ($1.94 billion) for the accommodation of refugees from Ukraine. For asylum seekers, the government’s promise to cover costs expired at the end of 2021 — a new agreement is pending.

In Berlin, Herrmann described a financially “lawless situation” and made it clear what he expects going forward: “In view of enormous inflation, the massive price increases that we have, it is of course obvious that the subsidies going to the municipalities in a new scheme must be at least slightly higher than those in 2021.”

Tighter border controls

While the intake of more refugees from Ukraine is not up for debate, the German government is determined to limit “unauthorized entries” of asylum seekers from safe third countries.

The pressure is increasing, not just in Germany, but overall at the EU’s external borders, Herrmann said. “That worries me,” said Faeser, who wants to ensure a “clear limit.” 

Border controls with Austria are to be extended for another six months beyond November. At the border with the Czech Republic, the federal police are also carrying out significantly more checks as part of their dragnet operations.

Faeser said she had also held “very serious talks” with her colleagues in the Czech Republic and in Austria, which had led to increased border controls there with Slovakia.

Austrian authorities are again policing the country’s border with Slovakia

Serbia’s visa system ‘unacceptable’

Faeser also called for the situation in Serbia and an increased deployment of Frontex to be discussed at the European level. 

Serbia allows visa-free entry for many nationalities, including Syrians, Iraqis and Turks, but also Indians and Pakistanis.

Authorities have observed an increase in people flying to Serbia and traveling on from there by land via Croatia, Slovenia and Austria, but also via Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic to Germany.

Faeser said the German government had a “clear expectation” that Serbia would move to align its visa rules with those of the EU. “Serbia’s visa practice is unacceptable. This also contributes to migration along the Balkan route.”

European states have a “joint responsibility to stop illegal entries,” she said.

Interior Minister Nancy Faeser (m.) with Bavarian State Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann (r.) and Leipzig Mayor Burkhard Jung

Revive the Dublin Regulation?

The German government also wants to negotiate at the European level whether and how refugees who have come to Germany from other EU countries can be returned to these countries. “I recently called on the European Commission to discuss the Balkan route,” Faeser said.

The Interior Minister refers to the Dublin Regulation, according to which, in principle, the first EU member state an asylum seeker enters is obliged to consider that individual’s application for asylum.

It is an agreement that has been awaiting reform since the increased number of refugees that arrived in 2015 and 2016.

  • Ukrainian refugees: A new life in Germany

    ‘I want to go home’

    Olexandra fled Kyiv on March 23. Today, she lives in Bergisch Gladbach, a city in western Germany. “I want to go home, but it’s not yet possible,” she tells DW. “Sometimes, I want to drop everything and return to Kyiv, even though bombs are falling on the city.” She says it is tough living in a foreign country. But “we must save as many lives as possible so we can rebuild Ukraine.”

  • Ukrainian refugees: A new life in Germany

    ‘God, please let me survive to see another day’

    “I made my decision to leave on March 15; a nearby subway station was hit, leaving my walls shaking, which woke me up,” recalls Olexandra. “On March 23, I boarded a train to stay with a friend in Lviv, but three days later, the city was also bombed, forcing us to shelter in the cellar.” She remembers thinking: “God, please let me survive to see another day.” Soon after, Olexandra fled to Germany.

  • Ukrainian refugees: A new life in Germany

    Hiding in an underground car park

    Olexandra spent the first days of the war hiding in a car park. She remembers how “on the third day, we started running out of food, at some stage I grew so weak I could not even tie my hair.” The shelter, she says, “had a toilet and washbasin we could use to clean dishes; but we did not have shower.”

  • Ukrainian refugees: A new life in Germany

    ‘I was shocked’

    Olena fled the Kyiv region with her children on March 10. She now lives in Cologne, western Germany. “I’m from the Donetsk area, Avdiivka is my hometown,” the woman tells DW. “Back in 2014 and 2015, we were under attack for eight months. And then came February 24, 2022. My God, I did not think war would break out again, I was shocked.”

  • Ukrainian refugees: A new life in Germany

    Getting to safety

    Olena spent the first two weeks of the war near Kyiv. “There were no Russian soldiers in the village itself, but they were in nearby Bucha, Makariv and Borodyanka — these places took heavy fire,” she recalls. “I decided to pack my things and flee; staying would have meant putting my own life and safety, and that of my kids, at risk.”

  • Ukrainian refugees: A new life in Germany

    ‘I want my children to grow up in peace’

    Olena feels fortunate to be in Germany. “I have never been here before, but it was the only country I ever wanted to go to; I got help finding an apartment, I feel well and safe.” She says she wants to stay in Germany. “My children are attending school, learning German; I’m learning the language as well,” she tells DW. “Twice, we had to flee a war zone; I want my children to grow up in peace.”

  • Ukrainian refugees: A new life in Germany

    Frightened to death

    Tatiana left Kharkiv on March 5. She is now based in Bonn, western Germany. She and her daughter endured three weeks of Russian shelling before fleeing. “My 10-year-old daughter was frightened, crying constantly, asking ‘Mom, am I going to die now?’ It was scary fleeing the country, but I could no longer bear seeing my daughter in this fearful state.”

  • Ukrainian refugees: A new life in Germany

    Tatiana’s daughter in a Kharkiv air raid shelter

    Tatiana remembers their escape from Kharkiv: “After five days, we reached Lviv. From there we traveled onwards to Poland; the border guards were friendly, telling us over and over we had reached safety.” They helped them carry their bags, as she recalls, and handed out toys to refugee children. “They gave us hot meals and everything we needed.”

  • Ukrainian refugees: A new life in Germany

    ‘My heart is in Kharkiv’

    Tatiana is grateful for the help she has received from Germany and other European states. “I’m in safety, but my heart is in Kharkiv, with my family and friends,” she tells DW. “Every evening I read the news about bombings, people killed and wounded, and each morning I call my family and friends, hoping they are okay.”

  • Ukrainian refugees: A new life in Germany

    Staying with German friends

    Inna is from Odesa. She and her friend Xenia fled Ukraine to stay with friends in Germany, who offered to put them up. The women’s children are able to keep studying because their Ukrainian schools offer remote classes. The mothers are thankful for all the support they have received.

  • Ukrainian refugees: A new life in Germany

    ‘We don’t know what will come next’

    Inna and Xenia say they face an uncertain future. “We don’t know what will come next,” one of them tells DW. Adding that “we know that our country will have to be rebuilt, and it’s clear there will be no jobs because the economy has taken a hit. Every Ukrainian knows that. The worst thing is that nobody knows how long all this will take, and what we are supposed to do.”

  • Ukrainian refugees: A new life in Germany

    Yearning for their home city

    Inna (pictured) wants to return to Odesa. Xenia does, too. She says they are merely guests in Germany. “My husband does not want me returning,” Xenia tells DW. “Several times, I have been very close to heading back, despite the fighting.” She says she never wanted to leave her city. “I would feel totally different with my husband by my side, he is in Odesa patrolling the streets.”

    Author: Darina Meletina


Inhumane treatment of asylum seekers

In practice, neither Greece — where most refugees arrive from Turkey and across the Mediterranean — nor other countries on the Balkan route have any interest in taking people back.

Migration expert Gerald Knaus speaks of an “asylum desert” that stretches from Greece to Austria: “These countries compete to see who can treat potential asylum seekers worse. The result is that almost no one wants to stay in a country in that region.”

While you’re here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing.

Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/germany-promises-more-housing-for-refugees/a-63414094?maca=en-rss-en-ger-1023-xml-atom

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