German
court rejects key pillar of Merz’s asylum crackdown
Under
pressure from the far right, Germany’s conservative chancellor had vowed to
turn away asylum-seekers at the country’s borders.
June 2, 2025
7:36 pm CET
By Nette
Nöstlinger
https://www.politico.eu/article/court-german-rejects-ruling-friedrich-merz-migration-europe-police/
BERLIN — A
Berlin court ruled Monday that the German government’s push to turn away
asylum-seekers at the country’s borders is unlawful, upending a key feature of
conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s promised crackdown on migration.
“People who
submit an asylum application during border controls on German territory may not
be turned back,” the court said in a statement on its decision. The ruling came
in response to a complaint by three Somali asylum-seekers who crossed into
Germany from Poland in May, but were then returned by German police.
The ruling
poses a major challenge to Merz, who in the lead up to his conservatives’
election victory earlier this year promised to implement an “effective entry
ban” on undocumented migrants and asylum-seekers from his first day in office.
Merz made that promise under pressure from the rising far-right Alternative for
Germany (AfD) party, which ran on an anti-immigration platform and is now the
country’s strongest opposition party.
Shortly
after Merz took office last month, his
interior minister, Alexander Dobrindt, announced he would send several
thousand additional police to Germany’s borders to conduct checks, declaring it
“a clear signal to the world and to Europe that the policy in Germany has
changed.” The announcement angered Germany’s neighbors, with Polish authorities
in particular criticizing Merz’s government for creating traffic and inhibiting
the movement of people and goods within the Schengen Area.
Following
the ruling, Dobrindt challenged the scope of the court’s decision, suggesting
it only applied to the three Somali complainants.
“We are
sticking to the returns,” he said. “We see that the legal basis is there and
will therefore continue to proceed in this way, regardless of this individual
case decision.”
Although the
binding effect of the decision is limited to the three Somali complainants, the
government would be well advised to apply the ruling to similar cases, a court
spokesperson told POLITICO. The court’s decision is final and cannot be
appealed, the spokesperson also said.
Legal
experts have said the German government’s policy is in violation of European
law — and some argued the new policy amounted to political theater. Under the
so-called Dublin Regulation, European countries are normally obliged to admit
asylum applicants to check which member country is responsible for adjudicating
their request. That argument was confirmed by the court in Berlin on Monday.
Dobrindt,
however, argues that Germany is within its rights to suspend European law based
on the need to safeguard internal security and to maintain law and order. Such
a move is necessary, he has said, “to counteract excessive demands”
asylum-seekers are placing on municipalities.
The court,
however, ruled the government had failed to sufficiently demonstrate a threat
to public safety or order.
The number
of asylum-seekers coming to Germany declined by about 30 percent last year,
even as migration remained a major political issue; 230,000 people applied for
asylum in Germany for the first time in 2024.
AfD
politicians are likely to portray the ruling as evidence that Merz is unable to
live up to his promises to crack down on migration.
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