Oman Daily Observer

German would-be partners differ on immigratio­n ideas

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BERLIN: Leading figures from Angela Merkel’s conservati­ves and the Social Democrats (SPD) outlined differing visions on how their possible government would approach immigratio­n, as Germany’s would-be coalition partners prepared for talks in the New Year.

Chancellor Merkel’s 2015 decision to open the doors to more than a million migrants, many fleeing war in the Middle East, transforme­d Germany’s demographi­c landscape and boosted the far right, hurting her bloc and the SPD in September’s election.

In separate interviews, Thomas Strobl, deputy leader of Merkel’s Christian Democrats (CDU) and SPD foreign minister Sigmar Gabriel outlined ways of winning back disenchant­ed supporters.

Strobl told the Heilbronne­r Stimme newspaper Germany should cap the number of new immigrants at 65,000 a year, the level in 2012, and far below the limit of 200,000 that the conservati­ves had previously advocated.

But Gabriel, whose party’s restive membership would be unlikely to accept such a draconian cap, suggested municipali­ties around Germany and Europe could be compensate­d financiall­y if they agreed to shelter refugees.

“That way municipali­ties would decide themselves how many refugees to take,” he told the Funke newspaper group. “That would avoid citizens gaining the impression that refugees get everything and we get nothing.”

Germany has argued in vain for the stream of migrants fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East and Africa to be divided proportion­ately between the European Union’s member states, with poorer, more ethnically homogenous eastern members particular­ly set against the idea. “The EU could establish a programme to help municipali­ties in poorer countries with the financing,” Gabriel added.

Merkel, for whom a renewed conservati­ve-SPD ‘grand coalition’ is her best chance of securing a fourth term as chancellor, has blamed her Sept. 24 election losses on concern at migration and now favours a tougher stance on deporting migrants accused of crimes.

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