
The rules for implementing a stricter European Union asylum law in Germany cleared the final hurdle in the upper house of parliament or Bundesrat on Friday.
Key points of the reform, which will apply across the EU starting June 12, are mandatory identity checks for people arriving at the EU's external borders.
For people from countries of origin with a low recognition rate, asylum examinations are to take place as part of the border control procedures. If an application is rejected, asylum seekers may be deported directly from there.
Since Germany is in the middle of Europe, it is affected by the external border procedures only with at its international airports and seaports.
Measures against moving on within the EU
Procedures for people seeking protection who have already filed an asylum application in another member state will be shortened. The transfer of asylum seekers to the state responsible for their procedure will be extended, for example if someone goes into hiding in the meantime.
The states can set up so-called secondary migration centres with a residency requirement. These are to house people who have to leave Germany because another EU country is responsible for their procedure.
Solidarity mechanism to help external border states
Heavily burdened states at the EU's external borders are in future to have some asylum seekers taken off their hands. The fact that Germany does not have to take in anyone this year under this solidarity mechanism is partly due to the fact that many asylum seekers and war refugees from Ukraine have come to the Federal Republic in recent years.
The Greens criticized the new rules as the biggest tightening of asylum law since 1993. While European rules had to be implemented, the centre-left coalition had acted with excessive harshness, it said. In the Bundesrat there were discussions, among other things, about provisions affecting minors.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Tremendous Spelunking: Cool Caverns All over the Planet - 2
Israeli military says it hit dozens of military facilities in Tehran - 3
Trump administration launches new immigration crackdowns in New Orleans and Minneapolis. Here are all the cities it has targeted so far. - 4
A volcanic eruption may have catalyzed the plague's arrival in Europe, study suggests - 5
How did life begin on Earth? New experiments support 'RNA world' hypothesis
Instructions to Pick the Ideal Pre-assembled Home for Your Necessities
At 72, Kathie Lee Gifford says aging isn’t what she expected. 'The golden years? It’s a lie.’
Women take pride in Holy Week roles after a Spanish Catholic brotherhood's procession excluded them
Vote In favor of Your Number one Sort Of Blossoms
Triumph’s Gorgeous, Super-Affordable and Approachable New Street Motos Share a Heart But Not a Soul
Displaced Palestinian families suffer as heavy rains flood Gaza tent camps
Rocket Lab launches mystery satellite for 'confidential commercial customer' (video)
2 ways you can conserve the water used to make your food
French lawmakers narrowly approve health care budget, suspending Macron's flagship pension reform













