Você está na página 1de 4

.

In many cases, most could not be picked up days before, according to the Bavarian
Ministry of the Interior.

One then does not know whether they are staying illegally in Germany or have gone

every few weeks flying a large passenger jet from Germany to Kabul to bring
some required to leave their home, stay clear regularly booked seats. Seven such
collective deportations have occurred since they were allowed by the Afghan
government a year ago. While 34 Afghans were still in the first machine, only
eight and 14 were left on the last two flights. However, 50 people were agreed per
group return.

Above all, this magnitude has never been achieved, because more than half of the
deportees were previously submerged. "For a collective deportation
to Afghanistan , Bavaria alone foresees about 50 people to leave the country",
said the Ministry of the Interior of the Free State at the request of WELT AM
SONNTAG.

But: "Not just on the day of deportation, but many days before, when we try to
deport the Afghans scheduled to be deported, most can not be picked up because
they have gone underground," the spokesman said. On the day of the
deportation, "then regularly only an order of magnitude of five people,
sometimes more, sometimes less, is left over, which we can deport." With this
modest number, Bavaria is even ahead of the country.

EXCLUSIVELY FOR SUBSCRIBERS

The State Ministry of the Interior also said whether the people who were
submerged "are illegally staying in Germany or have gone abroad, we do not
know". In any case, all would be invited to search and arrest, so that "in the case
of seizing detention pending deportation and thus provide for a later collective
deportation" could.
Some of the submerged Afghans are returning to the police later; According to
the ministry, "about one third of those out of the 50 or so leaving the country
who want to put Bayern on the fliers to Kabul are persons who had disappeared
in connection with earlier collective deportations".

It is particularly explosive that the submerged are mostly people who have
become criminally conspicuous. Because since May only offenders, terrorist
perpetratorsand those leaving the country may be deported to Afghanistan , who
stubbornly refuse to identify themselves.

The fact that so many people leaving the country succeed in submerging is
mainly due to one circumstance: most of those affected are released until shortly
before their deportation. As soon as they realize that their deportation is serious,
they can avoid their accommodation. In addition, the Ministry of the Interior in
Munich raises serious allegations: There is "reason to believe that they can rely
on a broad range of counseling services" from supporters.

An activist group is particularly in the view: "The so-called Refugee Council tries
to actively prevent deportations," said the spokesman. By announcing these
deportation dates through his website and giving tips on immersion , he moves to
the limit of criminal liability, according to the Ministry.

The problem could only be solved if the federal states took more people to leave
the country for release a few months before the flight. That this would be
effective, shows another experience of Bayern: There are the approximately five
Afghans, who could ever flow to Sammul deportation actually to Kabul, mostly
directly from the criminal or detention pending deportation or from the exit
custody.

In principle, early placement in deportation facilities is legally possible. However,


the conditions of detention are very narrow. The application means a legal act of
strength for the Auslnderbehrde in each individual case. In addition, under the
EU Return Directive, deportation detainees must be housed in facilities separate
from offenders. Currently, there are not even 500 places in Germany, and the
construction of such institutions is progressing only slowly. In many cases
deportation detention is not applied for solely because enforcement is not
guaranteed.

At present, it is not clear that politics is getting the problem under control. "As
long as the European legislator in the Return Directive and following him the
German jurisprudence the personal freedom of a foreigner higher than the state's
interest in enforcing the obligation to leave, narrow limits are set to an expansion
of the instruments," says the Bavarian Ministry of Interior. Of the approximately
200,000 Afghans who entered the country as protection seekers in the past few
years, around one in two applicants was rejected, but only around 6,000

Because even rejected asylum seekers can obtain a residence permit after some
time as so-called emigrants, according to the Federal Office for Migration and
Refugees ( BAMF ) only about 14,000 Afghans had to leave the country at the
end of September . Among them, about 10,000 had a tolerance - because the
repatriation is still not possible in the foreseeable future despite the continuing
obligation to leave the country. This may be the case because of unexplained
identity or illness.

This year, the trend for deportations and voluntary departures as well as in the
case of the Afghans is declining: Only 80 people forced to leave the country were
deported to Afghanistan by the end of September, another 278 to other EU
countries, as stated in the Federal Government's response to the WELT AM
SONNTAG to a small request from the Left Party. Accordingly, 16 deportations of
Afghans failed in the same period of resistance. Next Wednesday, the next
grouping flight to Kabul should take off, this time also the date was announced in
advance, and also this time many places will remain vacant.

Você também pode gostar