The Daily Telegraph

Failed refugees behind violent crime surge, says German report

- By Justin Huggler in Berlin

THE large migrant influx to Germany of recent years has fuelled a rise in violent crime, according to the findings of a government report.

Rejected asylum-seekers from countries considered “safe” were behind much of the rise, while genuine refugees from countries such as Syria and Iraq were more rarely involved, the study found.

The report’s authors called on Angela Merkel’s government to do more to return economic migrants posing as asylum-seekers to their own countries.

Violent crime rose by 10.4 per cent between 2014 and 2016 in Lower Saxony, the state chosen for the study.

The rise coincides with Mrs Merkel’s 2015 decision to open Germany’s borders to refugees, and the study found asylum-seekers were responsibl­e for more than 92 per cent of the increase.

It found that those whose asylum claims had been refused by the authoritie­s were disproport­ionately frequent offenders. People from Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia, who are routinely refused asylum in Germany as their home countries are considered safe, accounted for fewer than 1 per cent of asylum-seekers in Lower Saxony, but more than 17 per cent of violent crimes.

“It’s made clear to the north Africans from the outset that they have no chances here, that they must all go home,” Christian Pfeiffer, one of the report’s authors, told ZDF television.

“The war refugees are very quickly told they can stay. And then, of course, they try to do nothing wrong.”

Prof Pfeiffer, a criminolog­ist and former regional interior minister of Lower Saxony for Germany’s centre-left Social Democratic Party, called on the government to spend more on sending rejected asylum-seekers home.

“It’s not enough just to say they should be deported. I think it’s time for a new perspectiv­e in refugee policy: namely to invest large amounts of money in a return programme,” he said.

Rejected asylum-seekers are often allowed to remain in Germany in a semi-legal state: unable to work and with limited access to benefits.

The report’s findings come after high-profile cases such as that of Anis Amri, the rejected Tunisian asylumseek­er who killed 12 people when he drove a lorry into a crowded Berlin Christmas market in 2016.

However, while terror attacks dominate the headlines, the report found most of the surge in crime was caused by violence between migrants: 90 per cent of victims killed by asylum-seekers were themselves foreign nationals.

The fact most asylum-seekers are young males aged between 14 and 30 was a major factor in the violence, according to Prof Pfeiffer.

“Everywhere the lack of women has a negative effect. This increases the risk that young men conform to violent masculinit­y norms,” he said.

For this reason, he argued, calls to allow family reunificat­ion for those granted asylum were “not stupid”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom