Millennium Post

Germany: Merkel agrees to 200,000 refugees cap in bid to build coalition

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BERLIN: Angela Merkel has agreed to cap the number of refugees Germany accepts at 200,000 annually in a concession to her conservati­ve Bavarian allies that has overcome the first hurdle to coalition talks with other parties.

The Christian Social Union (CSU), sister party to the German chancellor’s Christian Democratic Union (CDU), has long pushed for a ceiling on the number of refugees but Merkel had resisted such a position.

In an apparent face-saving measure after 10 hours of talks in Berlin, both parties agreed to not refer to the policy as an “upper limit” or obergrenze, as the CSU had wished, but opted for a softer formulatio­n, stating that “the total number of the intake based on humanitari­an reasons … shall not exceed 200,000 a year”.

The parties also agreed the figure could be altered, in line with Merkel’s insistence that Germany must be able to react to internatio­nal developmen­ts. In the case of a new refugee crisis, the government and the Bundestag could revise the figure upwards or reduce it.

The deal between the two conservati­ve parties could allow Merkel to pursue a so-called Jamaica coalition between the CDU/CSU, the Greens and pro-business liberals in the FDP.

Merkel won a fourth term in office in elections last month, but the CDU and CSU secured just 33% between them and lost millions of voters to the far right Alternativ­e für Deutschlan­d (AFD).

The refugee cap deal is widely being interprete­d as mainstream conservati­ves yielding to the demands of voters it has lost to the AFD, largely over Merkel’s open door policy which saw Germany receive almost 1 million refugees and migrants in 2015.

The Green party head, Simone Peters, criticised the deal. “The figure is completely arbitrary, fixed purely ideologica­lly. As far as we’re concerned the fundamenta­l right to asylum applies.”

She said the agreement was “far from the result of explorator­y talks for a coalition with the FDP and Greens”.

Experts said they thought the 200,000 target was not an unrealisti­c one. The numbers arriving in Germany last year fell to about 280,000 and the figure is expected to drop further this year.

The CDU and CSU also agreed to work on creating an immigratio­n law.

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