Germany to allow deportations of ‘suspect’ Syrians: ministry

Germany will allow deportation of Syrians to their
war-ravaged homeland from 2021 if they are deemed to pose a risk to security,
an interior ministry official said Friday.
“The general ban on deportations (to Syria) will
expire at the end of this year,” Hans-Georg Engelke, state secretary at the
interior ministry, told reporters.
“Those who commit crimes or pursue terrorist aims to
do serious harm to our state and our population should and will have to leave
our country.”
The decision was taken at a telephone conference
between hardline conservative federal Interior Minister Horst Seehofer, who had
long called for an end to the deportation ban, and his 16 state-level counterparts.
The Social Democrats (SPD), junior partners in
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s right-left “grand coalition” government, failed in
their bid to win a six-month extension of the protections, in place since 2012.
They argued that the precarious security situation
in Syria made expulsions there indefensible.
Engelke, standing in for Seehofer who was in
quarantine after a coronavirus exposure, told a news conference that an
estimated 90 Syrian suspected Islamists were believed to be in Germany.
Calls for a change in stance have been growing since
a Syrian man was arrested in November on suspicion of carrying out a deadly
knife attack in the city of Dresden.
Prosecutors said the 20-year-old, accused of killing
one tourist and seriously injuring another, had a raft of criminal convictions
and a history of involvement with the Islamist scene.
He had been living in Germany under “tolerated”
status granted to people whose asylum requests have been rejected, but who
cannot be deported.
Boris Pistorius of the SPD, interior minister of
Lower Saxony, noted that on a practical level expulsions to Syria would remain
next to impossible “because there are no state institutions with which we have
diplomatic relations”.
But he sharply criticised the symbolic meaning of
Germany, which took in more than one million migrants including hundreds of
thousands of Syrians at the height of the refugee influx 2015-16, becoming what
he called the first EU country to lift the deportation ban.
“That’s an exceptional position we don’t necessarily
need to be proud of,” Pistorius said.