
Germany to make it easier to declare countries safe in curbs on asylum
The German government plans to make it easier to declare certain countries of origin safe under a push to reduce the number of asylum seekers, Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt said on Wednesday.
Under the plan agreed by ministers in Chancellor Friedrich Merz's government on Wednesday, approval from Germany's upper house of parliament would no longer be required in deciding whether there is persecution in a country that would justify granting asylum to people from there, Dobrindt told reporters.
The upper house Bundesrat represents Germany's 16 federal states. Circumventing the Bundesrat will speed up the process.
Merz won a national election in February pledging a crackdown on migration and to turn away asylum seekers at the border, but the tougher stance ran into legal obstacles this week and has drawn criticism from opposition parties.
Migration is among German voters' biggest concerns and a backlash against new arrivals has contributed to a rise in the popularity of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.
The cabinet also agreed on Wednesday to abolish mandatory legal counsel for asylum seekers facing expulsion.
"These are essential steps that are part of a whole raft of measures to bring about the asylum transformation," said Dobrindt.
A Berlin court this week ruled against the expulsion by German border police of three Somali asylum seekers. Merz said on Tuesday the verdict could restrict the migration crackdown but would not stop it.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The National
20 hours ago
- The National
Syrian teenager charged over plot against Taylor Swift concerts
German prosecutors said on Friday they had filed charges against a Syrian youth and alleged ISIS supporter linked to a 2024 attack plot on a Vienna concert by US pop megastar Taylor Swift. The suspect, named only as Mohammad A., was accused of supporting a foreign terrorist organisation and preparing a serious act of violence endangering the state, federal prosecutors said. He had, as a juvenile, started following ISIS ideology from April last year and had from July been in contact with a young adult from Austria who was planning a bomb attack at one of Swift's concerts, they said. "The accused assisted the young adult in his preparations by, among other things, translating bomb-making instructions from Arabic and establishing contact with an ISIS member abroad via the internet," federal prosecutors said in a statement. "The accused also provided the young adult with a template for the oath of allegiance to ISIS, which the young adult used to join the organisation." Police first took Mohammad A. into custody last September in the eastern German city of Frankfurt an der Oder, where the then 15-year-old went to school, but later released him. The federal prosecutors office in the western city of Karlsruhe said on Friday the charges were laid on June 17 in a Berlin higher regional court, which will now decide on their admissibility. Three shows in Vienna that were part of Swift's record-breaking Eras tour were cancelled last summer after authorities warned of a terror plot by ISIS sympathisers. Police detained three suspects, including a 19-year-old Austrian with North Macedonian roots, over the alleged attack threat, with the US saying it had shared intelligence to assist in the investigation. Swift later wrote on Instagram that "the reason for the cancellations filled me with a new sense of fear, and a tremendous amount of guilt because so many had planned on coming to those shows".

Middle East Eye
20 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
German Chancellor Merz calls on Iran to 'come to the negotiating table'
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has called on Iran to return to negotiations to prevent increased escalation in a joint press conference with Austrian Chancellor Christian Stocker. 'Cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) should be continued, not terminated,' he said on Friday. Speaking a day after a Brussels summit that convened EU leaders to discuss pressing issues, Stocker also reiterated a call for Israel to allow more humanitarian aid into Gaza.


Zawya
a day ago
- Zawya
German commission recommends raising minimum wage to $17.11
Germany is set to gradually raise its hourly minimum wage to 14.60 euros ($17.11) by 2027 from the current 12.82 euros under proposals from a government-appointed commission, less than the ruling coalition had initially agreed to target. Raising the minimum wage can make it harder for companies to take on staff as higher labour costs may force businesses to cut jobs or reduce hours. This risk is especially high for small firms and low-skilled workers, potentially leading to higher unemployment. Initially, the minimum wage is to rise to 13.90 euros at the beginning of 2026. The proposal of the commission, a body comprising employers and trade union representatives, must be implemented by the labour ministry. Germany's Labour Minister Baerbel Bas welcomed the agreement, which "shows that social partnership in this country works," and asked the government to make this adjustment legally binding as of January 1, 2026. Under the changes, the euro zone's largest economy would see full-time workers on minimum wage typically earn close to 2,500 euros a month by 2027. The country would then have the second-highest minimum wage in the European Union behind Luxembourg, which mandates a monthly minimum of 2,638 euros, Eurostat data from 2025 show. Three other EU countries have a national minimum wage above 2,000 euros per month - Belgium, the Netherlands and Ireland. In the coalition deal signed by the conservatives and Social Democrats (SPD) raising the minimum wage to 15 euros an hour in 2026 was framed as something "achievable", and was pushed by the SPD in the talks, but it appears that target will not be reached even by 2027. "In the long term, the minimum wage must provide protection against poverty and keep pace with overall wage developments," said Dagmar Schmidt, deputy chairwoman of the SPD parliamentary group at the Bundestag, welcoming the proposal while recognising that it fell short of what the SPD had hoped for. UNEMPLOYMENT ON THE RISE The commission's proposals come at a challenging moment for Germany after two years of economic contraction, when the weakness is taking its toll with a lag on the labour market and the number of unemployed people approaches the 3 million mark for the first time in a decade. "After years of economic stagnation, which has already left visible marks on the labour market, the time is likely over when minimum wage increases passed the labour market more or less without a trace," said Hagen Lesch, a labour expert at IW, an economic institute that promotes free enterprise, competition and open markets. Companies in Germany are growing more cautious in their personnel planning, the Ifo employment barometer showed on Friday before the minimum wage announcement. "Despite an improved mood in the economy, the labour market has not yet achieved the turnaround," said Klaus Wohlrabe, head of surveys at Ifo. "There is still a lack of orders for new staff to be hired." Jobs data show the number of unemployed people has risen by nearly a third since 2022, especially in helper occupations, which are mostly affected by the minimum wage. "A minimum wage of 14.60 euros threatens to exacerbate this development and could particularly push low-skilled workers out of the labour market," DMB president Marc S. Tenbieg said. ($1 = 0.8535 euros)