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Germany still Europe's top spot for asylum-seekers

October 17, 2021

The number of asylum applications in Germany has risen again this year. Along with traditional routes through Greece, Italy and Spain, Belarus has become a major migration route in the last few months.

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An asylum-seeker has her fingerprints taken by a German soldier
Most of the asylum-seekers who applied for protection for the first time came from Syria, Afghanistan and IraqImage: Armin Weigel/dpa/picture alliance

Germany remains the top destination for people seeking protection in Europe, with the number of asylum applications filed in the country already exceeding the 100,000 mark in 2021.

Germany's Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF) said that by the end of September it had received 100,278 initial applications from asylum-seekers.

This is 35.2% more than in the same period last year. 

Most of the asylum-seekers who applied for protection for the first time came from Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq. Of those, 40,472 initial applications came from people from Syria (up 57.1%), and 8,531 from people seeking protection from Iraq (up 22.2%).

The number of applicants from Afghanistan witnessed a sharp rise, with BAMF registering a total of 15,045 initial applications (up 138%) by the end of September.

Concerns rise over Belarus route

Along with traditional routes through Greece, Italy and Spain, Belarus has become a major migration route in the last few months as a result of a row between Brussels and Minsk.

European Union countries have accused Belarusian strongman Alexander Lukashenko of deliberately encouraging migrants from crisis regions, who are then taken to the borders with Poland, Latvia or Lithuania and illegally pushed into EU territory.

Lukashenko is allegedly retaliating for sanctions imposed by Brussels in response to the regime's violent crackdown against a pro-democracy movement.

German newspaper Welt am Sonntag cited sources within the EU's intelligence agency Europol as saying that Belarus is now helping Syrian nationals to fly directly to Minsk from Damascus.

Previously, the country was helping Syrian migrants who had fled the country's internal conflict to Turkey.

Belarus now also issues 90-day tourist visas to nationals of Pakistan, Egypt and Jordan, the newspaper said.

More than 4,900 people have been picked up at the German-Polish border who had entered the EU illegally via Belarus, Germany's federal police said this week.

Migrants stuck in cold at EU border

New coalition may reform asylum policy

The rise of the Belarus migrant route comes as Germany remains in limbo after last month's election.

The Social Democratic Party (SPD), which won the largest share of the vote, is seeking to form a coalition with the climate-focused Green Party and the business-focused Free Democratic Party.

If the alliance is agreed, the new government could reform refugee policy, making it easier for failed asylum-seekers to still build up entitlement to German nationality through several years of work.

The three parties' main political opponents, the conservative bloc of outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel, have hit out at the plan, saying it is tantamount to giving up control of migration.

Other parties, like the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), have demanded a more hard-line approach to immigration.

In August, the chairman of the Federal Labor Agency, Detlef Scheele, said Germany needed 400,000 immigrants a year to help the economy grow and replace retiring workers.

During the European migrant crisis from 2015 to 2017, Germany processed over 1.4 million asylum claims, according to data from the EU's statistics agency, Eurostat.

With material from KNA news agency