Friedrich
Merz says Syrians no longer have reason for asylum in Germany
Chancellor
suggests deportations could begin ‘in the near future’ as government seeks to
counter rise of AfD
Kate
Connolly in Berlin
Tue 4 Nov
2025 16.13 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/nov/04/friedrich-merz-syrians-no-reason-asylum-germany
Syrians
no longer have reason to be granted asylum in Germany after the end of their
country’s civil war, according to Friedrich Merz, who said they will instead be
encouraged to return to help with the reconstruction of their homeland.
During
Syria’s 14-year civil war, Germany took in more refugees than any other country
in the EU, but the chancellor and others in his coalition cabinet argue that
the situation has changed since the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s government 11
months ago.
Merz said
late on Tuesday that he expected many of the more than 1 million Syrians living
in Germany would voluntarily return home.
“There
are now no longer any grounds for asylum in Germany, and therefore we can also
begin with repatriations,” he said. Those who refused to return could face
deportation “in the near future”.
He
appeared to contradict his foreign minister, Johann Wadephul, who after a visit
to Damascus last week expressed doubt that many Syrians would choose to return
given the devastation and ongoing instability, which he said made a dignified
existence hard to imagine.
Wadephul
had previously taken a tougher stance, supporting the government’s line as it
seeks to stave off the rise of the far-right and anti-immigrant Alternative für
Deutschland (AfD).
His
apparent rethink drew criticism from some of his colleagues in the Christian
Democratic Union, some of whom said he was discouraging the return of those who
would be needed to rebuild their country.
What few
politicians want to touch on is the effect deportations might have on Germany,
where hundreds of thousands of Syrians have integrated successfully, learning
the language and joining the workforce – which is crying out for recruits at a
time when the German population is rapidly ageing.
More than
7,000 Syrian doctors are employed in the health sector, often in rural regions
that have been poorly served in recent decades.
Many of
the 1.3 million Syrians living in Germany, almost a quarter of whom were born
in their adopted home, have obtained citizenship, though the majority only hold
temporary residence permits.
Only
about 1,000 Syrians returned to their homeland with the help of federal aid in
the first half of this year.
The issue
has taken on growing significance given that five state elections are scheduled
to take place next year in which AfD is in tough competition with the Christian
Democrats and could secure state leadership posts for the first time.
The
latest row over the fate of the refugees coincides with the arrest in Berlin at
the weekend of a 22-year-old Syrian national for allegedly plotting an Islamist
suicide attack in Germany. The incident was the latest in a series of prominent
events that have triggered public concerns over security and migration.
Wadephul’s
empathetic remarks towards Syrians were seized upon by the AfD’s co-leader
Alice Weidel, who called them “a slap in the face to the victims of Islamist
violence”.
Merz said
on Monday he had invited Syria’s interim president, Ahmed al-Sharaa, to Germany
to discuss the deportation of Syrians with criminal records, which has been a
topic of debate in Germany for some time.
Wadephul
sought to paper over the perceived differences between his and Merz’s position,
saying on Tuesday that he was actively involved in pursuing the goal shared by
the entire government of increasing the number of deportations of migrants,
including of people from Syria.

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