Europe | |
Germany plans to 'defy EU laws' with mass rejection of asylum seekers at its borders following spate of terror attacks | |
2025-03-12 | |
Jens Spahn, a Christian Democratic Union (CDU) politician and former minister under Angela Merkel, revealed the new policy direction following talks with the Social Democrats (SPD) over the weekend. Mr Spahn told the Table.Briefings podcast that Germany's neighbours would be informed and possibly coordinated with - apparently contradicting claims made on Saturday that Germany would only turn back asylum seekers in conjunction with its partners. 'We are not making ourselves dependent on the consent of the other countries,' deputy leader of Germany's conservative CDU/CSU parliamentary group said on Sunday. He noted that the existing agreement on migration 'doesn't say agree but in coordination', and that 'we see all the legal bases there to enforce it either way'. But critics have already suggested it would be a breach of EU migration law and the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) if adopted. Mr Spahn has previously suggested Germany could leave the ECHR to overcome legal obstacles. The announcement comes after Austria, to the south, rejected Germany's idea of turning back asylum seekers at the border, insisting it would not accept them either. The harder line on migration comes in the wake of a spate of terror attacks across Germany in recent months and a shift to the right among voters, with burgeoning support for the far-right Alternative fur Deutschland (AfD) party pressing centrist parties to change course. Germany's conservatives under future chancellor Friedrich Merz said on Saturday that his CDU party had come to an agreement in principle with the centre-left SPD to form a coalition government. He said both sides had agreed on tough new steps to limit irregular immigration, including refusing all undocumented migrants at the borders, including asylum seekers. Merz has stressed the need to win back votes from from the AfD, which secured more than 20 per cent of votes in the election. Spahn said the SPD has been cooperative on the issue: 'We have a common interest in limiting migration.' The rejection of asylum seekers at the borders was at the centre of the CDU's campaign in an effort to hold on to voters unsettled by recent attacks on German soil. Merz has repeatedly pledged not to work with the far-right anti-immigrant AfD party despite their second-place finish, upholding a longstanding 'firewall' not to work with the party. Outgoing chancellor Olaf Scholz last month extended strict border controls brought in to tackle migration and Islamist terrorism, ahead of the February 23 election. But the tightening of borders has not been without backlash. The move, which saw 640 people turned back and 17 extremists identified by police in just the first five days, was met with condemnation from several European partners. Scholz at the time cited figures showing asylum applications had fallen by a third last year from 2023 and that 1,900 people smugglers had been arrested. Amid a shift in European policy towards migration, the EU is expected today to open the way for member states to set up migrant return centres outside the bloc following pressure from governments to facilitate deportations. The European Commission is to unveil a controversial planned reform of the EU's return system, which critics say is inadequate in its present form. Data shows that less than 20 percent of irregular migrants who are ordered to leave Europe currently do so. 'We want to put in place a truly European system for returns, preventing absconding, and facilitating the return of third-country nationals with no right to stay,' commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said Sunday. A souring of public opinion on migration has fuelled hard-right electoral gains in several EU countries, upping pressure on governments to harden their stance. Led by immigration hawks including Sweden, Italy, Denmark and the Netherlands, EU leaders called in October for urgent new legislation to increase and speed up returns and for the commission to assess 'innovative' ways to counter irregular migration. Most controversial among them is the creation of 'return hubs' outside the European Union where failed asylum seekers could be sent pending transfer back home. This is not possible at present as under EU rules migrants can be transferred only to their country of origin or a country they transited from, unless they agree otherwise. Magnus Brunner, the commissioner for migration, is expected to propose to the European Parliament in Strasbourg legal changes allowing EU countries to strike deals with other nations to set up such centres, according to people familiar with the matter. An expansion of the conditions under which irregular migrants can be detained is also likely to be featured in the proposal, which will need backing from parliament and member states to become law. Fraught with legal and ethical concerns, some experts say return hubs are an expensive and impractical idea that is unlikely to see large-scale uptake any time soon in spite of the commission's proposal. For Jacob Kirkegaard of Bruegel, a think tank, the amendments reflect a 'path of least resistance' chosen by von der Leyen when dealing with divisive issues that are no longer a priority given the fraught international environment. Brussels is currently busy dealing with US tariff threats, an aggressive Russia and the prospect of a collapse in transatlantic relations. 'This is simply about political bandwidth,' Kirkegaard said. 'She's going to get out of the way' and let member states do what they want, he said of von der Leyen. The changes are likely to upset rights groups, some of which have already voiced concerns. 'This new proposal will be harmful and confirms the EU's obsession with deportations,' said Silvia Carta of the Platform for International Cooperation on Undocumented Migrants (PICUM). 'We can likely expect more people being locked up in immigration detention centres across Europe, families separated, and people sent to countries they don't even know,' she said. Britain recently abandoned a similar scheme to deport illegal migrants to Rwanda, and Italian-run facilities to process migrants in Albania, coming with an estimated cost of 160 million euros ($175 million) a year, are bogged down in the courts. Return hubs will conceivably face a similar slew of legal challenges if they are set up, said Olivia Sundberg Diez of Amnesty International. 'We can expect drawn-out litigation, probably costly centres sitting empty and lives in limbo in the meantime,' she said. Yet proponents say there are few viable alternatives. 'If we are not going to do the return hubs, what will we do instead is my question? We have tried other systems for many years, it doesn't work,' Johan Forssell, Sweden's migration minister, told AFP. Irregular border crossings detected into the European Union were down 38 percent to 239,000 last year after an almost 10-year peak in 2023, according to EU border agency Frontex. | |
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Europe |
Open Borders EU Saw over a Million Asylum Seeker Applications in 2024 |
2025-03-10 |
[Breitbart] The European Union saw over a million over a million asylum applications lodged by foreigners for the second straight year in 2024, the international migration regulator disclosed this week. The annual report from the European Union Agency for Asylum (EUAA) revealed that EU nations, as well as Norway and Switzerland, had 1,014,420 requests for asylum last year. This marked the second year in a row that over a million requests were filed, 1,143,437 recorded in 2023, Euronews reports. According to the EUAA, some 48 per cent of asylum applicants came from countries with historically low chances of qualifying for refugee status, perhaps indicating an economic motive behind their attempts to gain residency in Europe. Meanwhile, figures from the EU’s Frontex border agency showed 239,000 illegal border crossings into the bloc, meaning that around one in four asylum applicants likely entered the bloc illegally. In terms of countries of origin for supposed asylum claims, Syria remained in the top place with 151,000, followed by Afghanistan at 87,382, Venezuela (73,187), Turkey (55,705), and Colombia (51,529). Germany, with its large economy and generous welfare schemes for migrants, remained the top destination for migrants seeking asylum last year, with over a quarter of a million filed at 237,000. Spain stood in second at 165,767, followed by Italy at 158,867, France (158,730), Greece (73,688), Belgium (39,206) and the Netherlands (33,437). In contrast, Hungary only saw 29 asylum applications last year, in a demonstration of the strict border controls enacted by the conservative-populist government of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán in Budapest. For protecting his nation’s borders, Orbán has long been at odds with Brussels, which has imposed millions in fines against Hungary, subtracting from reallocated EU funds. The issue of mass migration into Europe has become a key driver of elections, with anti-mass migration parties seeing wins in recent years in countries like the Netherlands and populist parties making significant gains in countries like France and Germany. A survey from YouGov conducted last month found that majorities in Britain, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and Sweden all believe that immigration has been too high into their countries over the past decade. This was particularly true for Spaniards and Germans, with 80 and 81 per cent of their respective populations saying that levels of been too high. Meanwhile, a majority of respondents in the seven nations surveyed felt that their governments had performed very or fairly badly in terms of controlling immigration. Over eight in ten in both France and Germany felt their governments had failed on the immigration front. |
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Europe |
Iceland Reverses Course Freezes Out Rush of Venezuelan Migrants |
2024-06-24 |
[Breitbart] Icelandic officials are pulling back on their former support for Venezuela![]() ...a country in Central America that sits on an enormous pool of oil. Formerly the most prospereous country in the region, it became infested with Commies sniffing almost unlimited wealth. It turned out the wealth wasn't unlimited, the economy collapsed under the clownish Hugo Chavez, the murder rate exceeded places like Honduras and El Salvador. A significant proportion of the populace refugeed to Colombia and points south... n The about face comes on the tail of moves by the Icelandic parliament to change policy on immigration to be more in line with that of other Nordic countries, according to Icelandic Monitor. The bill was wildly popular — even among the left-wing Green Party — and among its internal provisions allows Iceland to ignore the U.N. and its open border-styled immigration policy demands. The legislation reportedly sets stricter conditions for residency, family migration, and other measures. With the mood shifting against Venezuelans, especially, authorities deported 180 recent Venezuelan |
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Europe |
Somali, Syrian migrants denied entry at Estonian-Russian border this month |
2023-12-01 |
[ShabelleMedia] Estonia has raised concerns about the alleged manipulation of immigration by Russia along Europe’s eastern borders, pointing to an increase in asylum seekers attempting to enter Estonian and Finnish territories. The country’s Interior Ministry reported that around 30 According to InfoMigrants, last week, an additional 150 individuals were also refused entry into Estonia. In this regard, Veiko Kommusaar, Head of the Border Guard Division of the Estonian police said that these individuals typically travel independently, and there is no apparent coordination from Russian officials, unlike the 30 people in the previous week. In addition, Minister of Interior Affairs of Estonia Lauri Laanemets labelled these irregular crossing attempts at the EU’s external eastern border as a "hybrid attack operation" designed to compromise security and create unrest among the population of the Baltic state. The refusal of entry for 30 Starting in February next year, the Ivangorod border crossing connecting Russia and Estonia will cease to permit the passage of cars. This development is expected to impact transportation between Tallinn and St. Petersburg. Efforts are underway to assess the feasibility of alternative travel options, including the potential for bus travel from Tallinn to St. Petersburg, with the consideration of crossing the border on foot in Narva. On Monday, the Russian government asserted that Russian border guards were fulfilling their duties in accordance with established rules. The Finnish-Russian border, spanning 1,340 kilometres, is about three times longer than Estonia’s border with its eastern neighbour. Moreover, Minister Laanemets reported that on Monday, November 20, Since May 2021, a significant number of Grupa Granica, an NGO network monitoring the situation at the Polish-Belarusian border, has reported that at least 37 |
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Europe |
Spain possibly locates missing boat carrying 200 migrants, sends help |
2023-07-11 |
![]() ... a nation of about 14 million on the west coast of Africa bordering Mauretania to the north, Mali to the east, and a pair of Guineas to the south, one of them Bissau. It is 90 percent Mohammedan and has more than 80 political parties. Its primary purpose seems to be absorbing refugees... with about 200 "The plane has found a large boat with some 200 people on board, 71 miles to the south of Gran Canaria," a spokesperson for the service told Rooters, adding it was "possible" that it was the missing vessel. A rescue ship was on its way and would take about two-and-a-half hours to reach the location, the spokesperson added. Migrant aid group Walking Borders said on Sunday that the fishing vessel and another two boats - one carrying about 65 people and the other with between 50 and 60 on board - had been missing for about two weeks since they left Senegal to try to reach Spain. The Spanish rescue service said that although there was only one official alert in place for the boat with 200 passengers, its plane was on the lookout for any vessels in distress. Helena Maleno of Walking Borders said on Monday that the families of the at least 300 The condition of the Maleno's organization had contacted authorities in Senegal, Mauritania, Morocco and Spain, urging them to search for the missing boats. "There need to be more resources devoted to the search... A plane that flies for four hours isn't enough" for such an operation, she added. All three boats left in late June from the village of Kafountine in Senegal's region of Cassamance, home to a decades-long insurgency and located some 1,700 km (1,057 miles) from Spain's Canary Islands. Weather conditions in the Atlantic were bad for such a voyage, Maleno said. The Atlantic migration route, typically used by Data from the European Border and Coast Guard Agency Frontex shows 1,135 |
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Europe |
Turkiye accuses Greece of new migrant pushbacks |
2023-07-05 |
[Dawn] Turkiye has rescued 95 Two inflatable boats carrying 37 people and 47 people respectively were rescued off the Greek island of Lesbos on Saturday, the interior ministry said. Another boat carrying 11 people was spotted near Turkiye’s western port city of Izmir the same day, the interior ministry said. The ministry described all 95 people as "irregular Ankara regularly accuses Greece of pushing migrant boats back into Greece accuses Turkiye of turning a blind eye to irregular ![]() ’s latest accusations came just weeks after a fishing trawler carrying hundreds of Greek coastguards managed to rescue 104 people but as many as 560 others on board may have perished, by some estimates. The European Union ...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing... ’s border agency, Frontex, said last week it had received "no response" when it offered aerial support to Greek officials before the tragedy. |
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Africa North |
Boat Carrying 50 Migrants at Risk after Departing Libya |
2023-06-25 |
[LIBYAREVIEW] Alarm Phone, a charity that picks up calls from migrant vessels in distress, said on Friday that about 50 people who set sail on a boat from Libya are at risk of drowning in international waters. Well, yes. That's part of the game The relief group noted that it is in contact with the migrants, after their engine stopped working. The migrants reported that water was entering the boat. It said it has informed the Libyan authorities, and requested a quick rescue operation. “Alarm Phone is in contact with a group who escaped from Libya. The engine stopped working & the boat is adrift. People say water is entering the boat. We alerted authorities & demand a fast rescue to a place of safety!” Alarm Phone tweeted. Earlier this month, a boat carrying hundreds of migrants capsized, resulting in the death of 78 individuals, in a tragic event off the coast of Greece. This devastating incident ranks among the most severe maritime catastrophes in Greece’s history. The Italy-bound boat is believed to have departed from Tobruk, in eastern Libya. The Italian Coast Guard first alerted Greek authorities and Frontex about the approaching vessel. The rescue operation, orchestrated on a grand scale, engaged a multitude of resources. These included local harbor police vessels, a frigate from the Greek navy, an air force aircraft and helicopter, and six other ships that were in the vicinity at the time. |
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Africa North |
Twenty-Year-Old Nigerian Woman Arrested As Security Operatives Bust Prostitution Ring In Libya |
2023-04-11 |
[SAHARAREPORTERS] A20-year-old Nigerian woman and three other Rob Gowans of the Migrant Rescue Watch, disclosed this in a series of tweets on Sunday, April 9, 2023. Gowan said the Nigerian woman was being sold by her pimp for $10 per customer. The arrested suspects have been handed over to the Public Prosecution's office for legal action. It said, "#Libya 08.04.23 - CID in Benghazi dismantled a prostitution ring and arrested in Hawari area 4 undocumented # "All referred to the Public Prosecutor's Office for legal action." SaharaReporters reported that in October 2022, no fewer than five Nigerian and Ghanaian nationals were arrested by security forces in Libya for allegedly running a brothel in a rented apartment. The suspects were arrested in Tajoura, a town in north-western Libya, on Monday, October 24, 2022. Migrant Rescue Watch, which made this known on its verified Twitter handle, noted that during a raid, officers seized 'shine, illicit drugs, fake money and unauthorised wireless radio devices. |
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Europe |
Spain Announces Plan To Reduce Influx Of Africans, Other Migrants By 60% |
2023-03-08 |
[PUBLISH.TWITTER]
While visiting the European Border and Coast Guard Agency (Frontex) in Warsaw, Poland, last Friday, the minister urged the agency’s director, Hans Leijtens, to continue collaborating with the Spanish government and its African partners to drive back illegal The Spanish government has said it will cut down the influx of African While visiting the European Border and Coast Guard Agency (Frontex) in Warsaw, Poland, last Friday, the minister urged the agency’s director, Hans Leijtens, to continue collaborating with the Spanish government and its African partners to drive back illegal Grande-Marlaska boasted that their collaboration so far had yielded substantial results, noting that Spain recorded a sharp 56.9 per cent decrease in illegal migration, as opposed to the 25.6 per cent recorded in 2022. "Spain’s experience shows that the best way to deal with this phenomenon is to work with our partners to prevent irregular flows in the countries of origin and transit, based on cooperation, based on mutual trust and sustained in time," Schengenvisainfo quoted the interior minister as saying. He said the majority of the reductions were seen throughout the peninsula’s coasts, as well as in Ceuta, the Canary Islands, and the Balearic Islands—all of which are sites of seaborne entry into the European Union ![]() The minister claimed that since Spain, Cyprus, Greece, and Italia are frequently the first countries illegal im "External borders are not only national but European, and given the challenges we face, states of first entry must be supported politically and operationally," Grande-Marlaska said. |
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Europe |
Migrant entry numbers into Europe hit six-year high |
2023-01-14 |
[AlAhram] The number of attempts by ...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing... without authorization reached around 330,000 last year, the highest number since 2016, the EU's border and coasties agency said Friday. Almost half of the 2022 attempts were made overland through the Western Balkans region, EU agency Frontex said, according to its ``preliminary calculations.'' Regardless of entry route, Syrians, Afghans, and Tunisians together accounted for roughly 47% of the attempted border crossings. Men accounted for more than 80% of the attempts to get in, Frontex said. The agency calculates entry attempts rather than the number of people trying to get into Europa ![]() because it is often difficult to identify People arriving at Europe's borders to apply for asylum have a reasonable chance of being allowed in, while those who come without a visa in search of jobs and better lives are mostly turned away. Well over 1 million people, most of them Syrians fleeing conflict, entered the EU in 2015, overwhelming reception facilities and sparking one of the 27-nation bloc's biggest political crises. Member countries still argue over who should take responsibility for people arriving without authorization and whether their neighbors and partners should be obliged to help. Attempts to reform the bloc's asylum system have made little progress. Frontex's latest figures did not include almost 13 million Ukrainian refugees who were counted at the EU's external borders between February and December. Special emergency measures were introduced to ease their entry and help find them accommodation, training and short-term jobs. The number of people making potentially perilous journeys across the Mediterranean Sea in poorly equipped and often overloaded boats and rubber dinghies continued to rise last year. Frontex said that well over 100,000 crossing attempts were recorded, around 50% more than in 2021. The agency said that 2022 saw the most people in five years arrive from Libya, the main departure point in northern Africa. The number of people leaving Tunisia hit the highest level in recent history. |
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Africa North |
Rights group claims EU 'complicit' in Libya's migrants abuse |
2022-12-14 |
[AnNahar] Human Rights Watch on Monday accused the European Union ...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing... 's border and coasties agency of being complicit in migrant abuses by Libya by allowing the North African country's coasties to intercept migrant boats crossing the Mediterranean Sea for southern Europe. Following a data-based investigation report released by the New York-based watchdog last Thursday, it concluded that the agency, known as Frontex, uses its aerial surveillance technology to help Libyan forces locate migrant boats — rather than other rescue organizations or merchant ships also patrolling the Mediterranean. Every year, thousands of ![]() make their way through Libya, where a lucrative trafficking and smuggling business has flourished in a country fragmented for years between rival administrations in the east and west, each backed by different gangs and foreign governments. Last year, 2062 people were reported dead or missing after attempting to reach Europe by boat, according to the U.N. agency's Missing Those who survive and are caught by the Libyan coasties and returned to the country, face an uncertain future. Thousands of other The detention centers are supposed to be run by Libya's interim authorities but notorious militia groups remain in control. "By alerting Libyan authorities about boats carrying According to the report, Frontex began using drones to scan the Libyan coastline from a base in Malta in May 2021. The strategy had no ''meaningful impact' in lowering the death rate in migrant crossings of the Mediterranean but led to a rise in the number of Libyan coastguard interceptions, the report said. Seeking to stem the flow of ...a confusing city, one end of which is located in Lebanon and the other end of which is the capital of Libya. Its chief distinction is being mentioned in the Marine Hymn... , more than $500 million since 2015. The funds are intended to bolster its coasties service with better vessels and equipment, and improve conditions for However, Caliphornia hasn't yet slid into the ocean, no matter how hard it's tried... the policy has been heavily criticized as vast sums ended up in the hands of murderous Moslems and traffickers, according to a 2019 AP investigation. Libya's coasties has also profited, with members often handing over The HRW report concludes with a recommendation that Frontex, and other EU member states, deploy their own ships in the same areas where they now deploy drones, to ensure the EU members have for years fought over who should take responsibility for |
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Europe |
Boat carrying hundreds of migrants docks after Greek rescue: Coastguard |
2022-11-23 |
![]() The asylum seekers "were towed to port, they have yet to disembark", a coastguard spokeswoman told AFP. The agency had earlier said up to 500 people were believed to be on board. Earlier on Tuesday, a coastguard spokeswoman had told AFP that "the distress call said there are 400-500 people on board but that the operation was hampered by near gale-force winds." "They can see the boat, it's adrift, there is a large number of people on board," she said. The coastguard said it had received the distress call shortly after midnight on Monday. Two nearby cargo ships, a tanker and two Italian fishing boats were lending assistance, it said. Because of bolstered patrols by the Greek coastguard and EU border agency Frontex in the Aegean Sea, migrant smugglers are increasingly employing the longer and more perilous route south of Crete, Greek officials say. "Eighty percent of flows from ...the occupiers of Greek Asia Minor... go straight to Italia," Migration Minister Notis Mitarachi told Skai TV last week. Last month, one of the sailboats believed to have 95 people on board sank at the island of Kythira, south of the Peloponnese peninsula. The boat went down beneath a huge vertical cliff. At least eight people died and survivors -- mainly from Iraq, Iran ![]() spontaneouslytaking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militiasto extend the regime's influence... and Afghanistan -- were hauled to safety with ropes and a construction crane in a frantic pre-dawn operation. Greece, Italia and Spain are among the countries used by people fleeing Africa and the Middle East in search of safety and better lives in the European Union ...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing... The Greek coastguard has said it has rescued about 1,500 people in the first eight months of the year, compared with less than 600 last year. The International Organization for Migration has recorded nearly 2,000 |
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