In Germany, there are thousands of asylum seekers who, according to a report in Welt am Sonntag, have had to leave the country several times. On October 30, more than 4,900 asylum seekers in Germany, who had arrived twice since 2012, were deported or voluntarily left the country - and are now back in Germany and filed a third asylum application.
With more than 1,000 asylum seekers currently living in Germany, this is already the fourth attempt, 294 of them have even reached trial number five or more, writes the "Welt am Sonntag". The newspaper refers to the replies of the Federal Government to requests from an AfD MP.
Overall, the report says that more than 28,000 asylum seekers who have applied for asylum since 2012 and then had to leave Germany are back in the country. Nevertheless, the newcomers are only a small part of all those seeking protection. According to the Federal Statistical Office, a total of 1.78 million people seeking protection came to Germany between 2010 and 2018.
Violation of entry bans - CSU politicians demand prison sentences
Andrea Lindholz (CSU), chairwoman of the Interior Committee in the Bundestag, demanded harsher penalties for violations of entry bans in the newspaper: "Any violation of an existing entry ban, which is basically imposed after deportations, must end immediately in custody."
Federal Interior Minister Horst Seehofer (CSU) announced three weeks ago after the return of the deported offender Ibrahim Miri to Germany, a draft bill of his house, which should make it possible to detain foreigners with a re-entry ban for the entire duration of their new asylum examination. So far, this is only possible for a few months, often there is no arrest.
Clan chief Ibrahim Miri was convicted in Germany more than ten times legally, including robbery, theft, stealing, embezzlement and gang drug trafficking. He was deported to Lebanon in July. However, at the end of October he reappeared in Bremen, filed an asylum application, but was arrested. His second deportation followed in November.