China Daily

Scholz pressured to tighten immigratio­n laws

- By JULIAN SHEA in London julian@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz is coming under pressure to go through with pledges to tighten the country’s immigratio­n laws after newly published figures from the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees showed a 51 percent rise in asylum applicatio­ns in 2023.

In an interview with Der Spiegel newspaper in October, when questioned on immigratio­n, Scholz announced a variety of measures to make it harder to enter the country, and also vowed to get tougher on deporting people with no right to stay in the country.

“On the one hand, there is the immigratio­n of workers that we need. And there are those who are seeking asylum because they are the targets of political oppression,” he said. “On the other hand, though, that means that all those who don’t belong to one of those groups cannot stay. That is why we are limiting irregular migration to Germany. Too many people are coming.”

In 2023, 351,915 asylum applicatio­ns were registered in Germany, a figure that Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said showed the country “must consistent­ly continue our course to limit irregular migration”.

A breakdown of the figures showed that of the asylum applicatio­ns, the largest number — 104,651 — came from Syria, followed by Turkiye (62,624), Afghanista­n (53,582), Iraq (12,360), Iran (10,206), Georgia (9,399) and Russia (9,028). And in 52 percent of cases on which a ruling had been reached, protection status had been granted.

Scholz’s coalition government has been coming under fire on a variety of fronts, including the economy and agricultur­al policy. Immigratio­n is a particular­ly volatile issue that the increasing­ly popular far-right Alternativ­e for Deutschlan­d, or AfD, party will be keen to exploit.

Previously, AfD support had mainly been in the east of the country, but following electoral success further west in October, its co-leader, Alice Weidel, said: “AfD is no longer an eastern phenomenon, but has become a major all-German party. So we have arrived.”

In a survey carried out by the Infratest Dimap research organizati­on in fall and quoted by the Politico website, when asked what topics had influenced supporters’ decision to vote for AfD, immigratio­n, at 65 percent, was the biggest concern.

Scholz’s government faces a difficult balancing act because of a nationwide skills shortage that means Germany is increasing­ly in need of migrants to help maintain certain sections of society.

In April 2023, a survey by the Competence Center for Securing Skilled Labor showed that the previous year, there were 1.3 million job vacancies in Germany requiring skilled or qualified profession­als, and almost half remained unfilled.

With many neighborin­g European Union nations that might be the obvious source of new employees facing similar demographi­c challenges to Germany, the country might need to look further afield to fill those vacancies.

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