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Germany: Federal Office for Immigration accused of taking bribes to grant asylum status to over 1,000 migrants
The Federal Office for Immigration (BAMF) and Refugees in Bremen Germany is being accused of “wrongfully granting asylum to over a thousand refugees between 2013 and 2016 who had their applications dismissed in other federal states.”
Now they are being investigated for “taking bribes in exchange for granting favourable decisions.” “Interior Minister Horst Seehofer has said that he won’t spare reputations in his efforts to get to the bottom of a scandal that has hit public trust in the asylum process.” Not that the public still had any trust in the asylum process, even aside from the “BAMF affair”.
The scandal has spotlighted a strange anomaly in Germany: whether you get asylum depends heavily on where you apply…. Iraqi and Afghan asylum seekers were far more likely to receive asylum in Bremen than in states like Brandenburg and Bavaria.
The entire refugee and immigration process in Germany and across Europe is reckless, corrupt, incompetent and flawed. While politicians continue to line their pockets with taxpayer dollars, it is the public that pays the price economically and with their safety:
The scandal could barely have come at a worse time for the German authorities. The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) cruised into the Bundestag in last year’s national elections by stoking popular fears that Germany’s asylum system is widely abused.
The label of “far right” continues to be applied to sensible and responsible politicians and political parties that are trying to protect their countries from being unrecognizable — a process that has already far advanced in Germany and elsewhere across Europe. One example: in April, a state of emergency was declared in Duisberg as rival Muslim migrant gangs brawled in the street with machetes.
“Cash for refugee status: the scandal rocking the German asylum system.” The Local (thanks to David), May 22, 2018:
What is the BAMF affair?The scandal centres around the Federal Office for Immigration and Refugees, which goes by the acronym BAMF.The BAMF office in Bremen is accused of wrongfully granting asylum to over a thousand refugees between 2013 and 2016 who had their applications dismissed in other federal states.Prosecutors in Bremen are currently investigating the former head of the Bremen office, Ulrike B., and various employees on suspicion that they took bribes in exchange for granting favourable decisions.In April, prosecutors searched six private properties and the offices of two law firms as part of their investigation. While it is not yet certain whether BAMF employees in Bremen received money in return for granting asylum, a lawyer’s office in Hildesheim is said to have charged €1,000 to ensure that the Bremen office handed down a positive decision.Are there wider implications?The scandal has spotlighted a strange anomaly in Germany: whether you get asylum depends heavily on where you apply.Figures published in October last year showed that Iraqi and Afghan asylum seekers were far more likely to receive asylum in Bremen than in states like Brandenburg and Bavaria.In Bremen, the success rate for asylum seekers from Iraq was 96.4 percent in the first six months of 2017 – almost twice as high as in Berlin, where the rate was 50.3 percent. Moreover, 65 percent of asylum applications from Afghans were successful in Bremen, whereas 30.9 percent of Afghan asylum seekers were successful in Brandenburg.The Interior Ministry has now decided to look more closely at this anomaly and is reviewing the asylum process in ten states where applications have been granted at rates that are either unusually high or unusually low. As part of the investigation some 8,500 randomly chosen cases will be examined for irregularities.Seehofer has said that sloppiness or overwork “seem to” explaine [sic] the wide difference in approval rates. “But I always say that it ‘seems to be’ the case. We are working it all out to make sure that everything is cleared up,” he said on Tuesday….https://www.jihadwatch.org/2018/05/germany-federal-office-for-immigration-accused-of-taking-bribes-to-grant-asylum-status-to-over-1000-migrants
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