German government finances anti-deportation brochure for rejected asylum seekers
Berlin - The website "Handbook Germany", which is sponsored by the German Ministry of the Interior, has published advice on how rejected asylum seekers can avoid deportation. Asylum seekers with children are advised, for example, that deportations may not take place "if a minor child cannot be found at the time of deportation". The news site Apollo News was the first to report this.
The site also recommends filing a lawsuit against the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF) – "You cannot be deported while your lawsuit is pending" – or contacting pro-asylum associations. The site also points out that for asylum applications that have been classified as inadmissible under the Dublin Regulation, the six-month transfer period begins again as soon as the asylum seeker submits an urgent application. The Solingen attacker, for example, used this legal loophole.
There is also a reference to the website "Stop deportations. Right to stay for everyone". This is a Hessian anti-deportation group that is linked to the left-wing radical scene in Frankfurt and stresses that it is "against deportation for political reasons". A text on the website contains information that is supposed to show "how you can try to prevent your deportation while you are still on the plane".
Asylum seekers should discover “severe war trauma”
For example, rejected applicants should not “sit down on the plane and make it clear that they are not flying voluntarily.” In addition, “supporters” should inform the “other passengers” on the plane and “call on them to protest.”
Asylum seekers can also write follow-up applications after a successful deportation, according to another text from "Handbook Germany". If there are "new indications", such as if an applicant is found to have "serious war trauma" that "has previously gone undetected", the application can still be approved.
The "Handbook Germany" website is run by the "Neue Deutsche Medienmacher*innen" association. The association is supported by the Federal Ministry of the Interior, the Federal Commissioner for Migration, Refugees and Integration and the Commissioner for Anti-Racism. The former chairwoman is the Federal Commissioner for Anti-Discrimination, Ferda Ataman . The association annually awards the negative prize "The Golden Potato" for reports that the association does not like. The term "potato" is intended to be a derogatory term for Germans.
Source: Junge Freiheit