Bundestag passes law: Rejected asylum seekers can be deported more quickly

Bundestag passes law
Rejected asylum seekers can be deported more quickly

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With votes from the traffic light factions, the Bundestag approves a package of measures for the simplified deportation of rejected asylum seekers. It provides more rights for police and extended detention options. The Union describes the law as a “non-starter”. It is also controversial in the coalition.

An extension of exit custody should prevent deportations from failing at the last moment in the future. After a long tug of war in the coalition, the Bundestag passed a corresponding law with the majority of the traffic light – even if some Green MPs voted against it. The law provides for a number of procedural simplifications and tightened rules to make it easier to deport foreigners who are obliged to leave the country.

“Anyone who does not have the right to remain in Germany must leave Germany again,” emphasized Federal Interior Minister Nancy Faeser. “This is a prerequisite for migration to be accepted in society as a whole and for integration to work.” In the past, deportations repeatedly failed because those affected went into hiding and could no longer be found. For this reason, the statutory maximum duration of detention on departure will be extended from the previous 10 days to 28 days.

In addition, in the future, authorities representatives will be allowed to enter rooms in shared accommodation other than just the room of the person being deported. The bill was briefly removed from the Bundestag agenda in the last week of the session before Christmas because the Greens had called for improvements. At her insistence, those affected should now be provided with a lawyer. For families with underage children, detention pending deportation is generally excluded.

In addition, the law provides for tougher action against smugglers. Due to protests from human rights organizations, a subsequently inserted passage is intended to ensure that the sea rescue of refugees is not criminalized.

Union criticizes the law as ineffective

The day before the vote, some Greens had once again expressed doubts as to whether the protection of sea rescuers from criminal prosecution was sufficiently secured. The Green Party’s legal policy spokesman, Helge Limburg, held out the prospect of further “clarification” in the event of legal uncertainties. Nevertheless, there were some dissenting voices from his party.

Clear criticism of the law came from the Union and the AfD, for whom the tightening did not go far enough. The CDU MP Christoph de Vries complained that the changes implemented by the Greens would make an already weak law completely ineffective. The law is a “non-starter,” said de Vries. This “doesn’t come close” to solving the migration crisis. The Left, on the other hand, sees the measures now agreed as a massive attack on fundamental rights and civil liberties.

The so-called Return Improvement Act includes around 40 individual measures. This means that those in custody who are required to leave the country no longer have to be notified of their deportation. The current one-month notice requirement for deportations after a year of toleration is also no longer applicable. There are also new reasons for expulsion such as committing anti-Semitic crimes or entering the country with false documents. For people without identification documents, it is also easier to read cell phone data in order to clarify identity and country of origin.

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