Posted on 04/18/2019 9:21:55 AM PDT by Olog-hai
German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer gained Cabinet backing Wednesday for his Orderly Return Bill (Geordnete-Rückkehr-Gesetz).
The plan will go to parliament for debate, and could pass before the summer recess.
However, German states do not all approve of the plan, which would see asylum seekers who are to be deported being held in state jails rather than pre-deportation holding facilities.
Seehofer said his package contained strong elements that would facilitate expulsions. Last year, Germany deported about 25,000 people. This represents just over a tenth of the total number of people ordered to leave the country. [ ]
Following Europes 2015 refugee crisis, asylum applications filed in Germany rose to 722,370 in 2016. Last January, Seehofer said Germany had struck a balance in 2018 by lowering the total to between 180,000 and 200,000.
(Excerpt) Read more at dw.com ...
So, easy to get in, hard to get them out. Makes sense in a leftard kind of way.
A lot of this ‘tough-business’ is eyewash only.
That one deportation holding point rented out of a aircraft hanger at a major airport, they were paying roughly a quarter-million Euro monthly, but the most that the fenced-in area of the hanger could hold was a dozen folks.
The bulk of these folks have no passport, nor are they making much of an effort to get a passport.
Rule by crisis.
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So, easy to get in, hard to get them out. Makes sense in a leftard kind of way.
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Maybe they should build a wall...say separating the West side from the East.
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