Ads Top

This is how many migrants the federal government flies into Germany


The number of asylum applications is increasing and the municipalities are groaning. Meanwhile, the federal government is flying in more migrants. They mainly come from one country.

Berlin - The federal government has flown in more than 22,000 migrants since 2017. Around 85 percent of them come from Syria, as can be seen from the federal government's response to a question from AfD member of the Bundestag Stephan Brandner. This is available exclusively to Junge Freiheit.

In the first half of 2023 alone, over 2,200 people were flown in. However, the current year does not reach the high of 2021. In the pandemic year, the federal government flew almost 6,000 migrants to Germany. The majority are minors.

In the eyes of the federal government, the migrants flown in are “those in need of protection”. They do not go through an asylum procedure and are not reflected in the asylum statistics. The costs for entry and the 14-day initial reception procedure are borne by the federal government, that is, the taxpayer. Since 2010, almost 82 million euros have been spent.

Brandner: Stop migrants coming in and use money wisely
The AfD deputy leader Brandner criticized the JF for the extensive support provided to migrants. “While the federal government is looking for billions in the current budget crisis, there is obviously still enough money to fly in asylum seekers.”

The number of asylum applications has already reached an “unacceptable record”. The federal government does not have to fly in more migrants to provide them with generous support.

Brandner: “Anyone who has previously believed these were conspiracy theories will be proven wrong: the almost 82 million euros that have been spent for this purpose since 2010 as travel costs and for the admission process alone - plus the maintenance costs in the period that followed tens of millions of dollars could really be put to much better use in the interests of the country’s citizens.”

Powered by Blogger.