German lawmakers vote to suspend family reunions for many migrants

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BERLIN (AP) — German lawmakers voted Friday to suspend family reunions for many migrants, part of a drive by the new conservative-led government for atougher approachto migration. Parliament's lower house voted 444-135 to suspend the possibility of family reunions for two years for migrants who have "subsidiary protection," a status that falls short of asylum. At the end of March, more than 388,000 people living in Germany had the status, which was granted to many people fleeingSyria's civil war. New ChancellorFriedrich Merzmadetougher migration policya central plank of his campaign for Germany'selection in February. Just after he took office in early May, the government stationed more police at the border and saidsome asylum-seekerstrying to enter Europe's biggest economy would be turned away. The bill approved Friday is the first legislation on migration since Merz took office. It will suspend rules dating to 2018 that allowed up to 1,000 close relatives per month to join the migrants granted limited protection, with authorities making case-by-case decisions on humanitarian grounds rather than granting an automatic right for reunions. Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt told lawmakers that the change would result in 12,000 fewer people being able to come to Germany each year and "break a business model" for smugglers. People often know they won't get full recognition as refugees, "but they set off for Germany because it is known that, even without asylum recognition ... you can have your family follow," Dobrindt said. "That is a significant pull effect and we are removing this pull effect today." Dobrindt said "our country's capacity for integration simply has a limit." Liberal opposition lawmakers decried the government's approach. Marcel Emmerich, of the Greens, described the legislation as "an attack on the core of every society, on a truly central value — the family." "Anyone who wants integration must bring families together," he said. The far-right, anti-migrationAlternative for Germanydescribed the move as a very small step in the right direction. German governments have for years faced pressure to curb migration as shelters across the countryfilled up. The administration of Merz's predecessor, Olaf Scholz, already had taken some measures including the introduction of checks on allGermany's borders. Asylum applications declined from 329,120 in 2023 to 229,751 last year and have continued to fall this year.

 

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