
By Carl Victor Wachs
Now it’s official: The new refugee crisis is pushing Germany’s cities and countries to the limit!
A query by the EPD news agency in all federal states revealed: Regular places in accommodation are or are becoming scarce almost everywhere, the first regions are already relying on emergency accommodation.
In BERLIN Almost 3,000 people are already waiting for accommodation in the two arrival centers. Two 400-person tents are already in operation at the former Tegel Airport. Numerous decommissioned container accommodations are to be put back into operation. Social explosive guaranteed!
The Interior Authority of HAMBURG explained that more than 99 percent of the places in the Hanseatic city were occupied, one already had to fall back on halls and tents.
Means: Not much is possible anymore.
Also in NORTH RHINE WESTPHALIA the municipalities are at a point where they “can only accommodate newly arriving people in emergency places”.
Explosive: The domestic politicians of the countries are preparing for the fact that the rush will INCREASE in the coming months.
40 percent more applications for asylum
By October, the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees counted almost 160,000 initial applications for asylum. That was almost 40 percent more than last year. Most applicants are currently from Syria, Afghanistan and Turkey.
War and destruction continue to make it impossible for many refugees from Ukraine to return home.
The deputy head of the German police union Manuel Ostermann (32) criticizes in BILD that Interior Minister Nancy Faeser recently wanted to discuss more about cash limits than immigration limits: “Germany is again the center of the migration crisis. The priority now would be the introduction of border controls, the enforcement of the enforceable obligation to leave the country and the will not to legalize illegal migration through the back door.”
“Dramatic” increase in illegal border crossings
The domestic political spokesman for the Union parliamentary group Alexander Throm (54, CDU) calls the increase in illegal border crossings “dramatic”. Throm: “Mrs. Faeser must finally act in order not to lose control.”
Even inside the traffic lights there is a rumble. Manuel Höferlin (49), domestic policy spokesman for the FDP parliamentary group, calls for a “fresh start in migration and integration policy”.
Höferlin to BILD: “Criminals must be consistently deported. On the other hand, we want to make it easier for qualified workers to immigrate by introducing a points system.”
