Advertisement

Germany extends border controls another six months

AFP
AFP - news@thelocal.de
Germany extends border controls another six months
Officers of the Polish Border Guard and the German Federal Police stand in a German-Polish Police and Customs centre on the border. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Sebastian Gollnow

Germany will extend temporary border controls by a further six months, the interior ministry said Monday, calling the measures necessary in the absence of 'functional European migration policy'.

Advertisement

Spot-checks introduced in September 2024 will now be in force until at least mid-September 2026, having already been twice extended, ministry spokesman Leonard Kaminski said.

"Local authorities are still overwhelmed," he said. "We have to do more here so that we get to a situation that is sustainable for our country, for our society."

Under the Schengen Agreement covering most of western and central Europe, border checks are supposed to have been abolished with limited exceptions for emergencies.

Along with several other nations including neighbours such as Poland and Austria, Germany has reintroduced some checks, citing a threat to order and security from uncontrolled migration.

READ ALSO: Germany to send soldiers to fortify Poland border

The last government under Social Democratic Chancellor Olaf Scholz began checks after a series of deadly attacks carried out by foreign nationals shook Germany.

Since taking office in May, a coalition led by conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz has deployed more police at the borders in a bid to turn back greater numbers.

"An overhaul of migration policy has begun, but we haven't reached the end of the road," Kaminski said.

"I cannot give you a specific figure in terms of reductions, but quite simply, there needs to be order when it comes to migration policy," he added.

In December, Merz had said he expected the measures to end following joint European Union action to better police the bloc's external borders.

Advertisement

Germany has not backed down from the checks despite a court ruling in June that the government broke the law when it sent back three Somalian asylum seekers to Poland without considering their claim.

Between mid-September last year and the end of January almost 50,000 people were sent back as a result of the checks, Kaminski said.

Merz has cracked down on migration since taking power last year, instituting the controls, deporting some convicted criminals to Afghanistan and making it harder for family members outside Germany to join refugees inside the country.

The anti-migration Alternative for Germany (AfD) party is about level with Merz's conservative CDU in most polls.

READ ALSO: Why are young Europeans increasingly supporting anti-immigration parties?

More

Comments

Join the conversation in our comments section below. Share your own views and experience and if you have a question or suggestion for our journalists then email us at news@thelocal.de.
Please keep comments civil, constructive and on topic – and make sure to read our terms of use before getting involved.

Please log in to leave a comment.

See Also