Germany Steps Up Deportation of Failed Asylum-Seekers

Faced with an unprecedented influx of refugees and growing anxiety among voters, German authorities have stepped up the deportation of failed asylum-seekers.
Germany Steps Up Deportation of Failed Asylum-Seekers
Refugees walk through a deportation center in Bamberg, Germany, on Oct. 22, 2015. Hundreds of asylum seekers, most of the from western Balkan nations, who have had their applications rejected are awaiting deportations. Nicolas Armer/DPA via AP
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BAMBERG, Germany—Faced with an unprecedented influx of refugees and growing anxiety among voters, German authorities have stepped up the deportation of failed asylum-seekers.

New figures show that the number of deportations almost doubled this year from 2014. By the end of November, authorities had deported 18,363 people whose asylum request had been rejected, compared to 10,884 in all of last year.

“(The increase) can be explained on the one hand simply by the increasing number of people who are getting negative (asylum) decisions,” Interior Ministry spokesman Johannes Dimroth said Monday.

But the trend is also affected “by the states’ increasing willingness to carry out these procedures,” he said.

The task of handling asylum requests falls to Germany’s 16 states and some have been more rigorous in applying the law than others.

Bavaria, the state that most asylum-seekers first set foot in, more than trebled its deportations to 3,643 in the first 11 months of 2015 from 1,007 last year. The conservative government there has been particularly forceful in pushing to limit the number of refugees coming to Germany—estimated at about one million this year—and speed up deportations of those already in the country.