Grevesmühlen: CDU district administrator calls for deportation offensive from the federal government

Grevesmühlen
After a protest against refugee accommodation: the CDU district administrator calls for a deportation offensive

A container village for 400 migrants is to be built in the village of Upahl south of Grevesmühlen. Residents are protesting with banners like this one, among other things

© Bernd Wüstneck / dpa

This week there were tumultuous protests in Grevesmühlen against accommodation for several hundred refugees. Now the CDU district administrator takes a position on what is happening in Northwest Mecklenburg.

After protests in Grevesmühlen with riots against the construction of refugee accommodation, the district administrator of the Northwest Mecklenburg district called on the federal government to act. “The federal government must finally recognize the situation of the municipalities,” said the CDU politician Tino Schomann on Friday evening in the ARD “Tagesthemen” with a view to the situation with refugee accommodation. “The federal government must limit and control, must stop illegal migration and must finally start the deportation offensive in order to free up capacities.”

“We are running into a situation that society can no longer understand,” warned Schomann. He demanded: “We need the resources and we need the opportunities to implement this.”

120 police officers had to protect the meeting in the district council in Grevesmühlen

On Thursday evening, 700 people demonstrated against the planned construction during an extraordinary district council meeting in Grevesmühlen. Some tried to gain access to the non-public part of the session. 120 police officers shielded the session. At the meeting, the district council approved the construction of the container accommodation in the village of Upahl.

Accommodating 400 people in a community where 1,600 citizens lived – “that’s a relationship that doesn’t fit,” Schomann admitted. “But the situation is so explosive because we have no accommodation capacity and have already occupied sports halls since November (…).” He wasn’t offered any land – “all I hear is: no, no, no”.

The general manager of the Association of Towns and Municipalities, Gerd Landsberg, recently warned that many municipalities were “long since at their limit” when it came to accommodating refugees and displaced persons. In Germany, more people applied for asylum last year than at any time since 2016. 217,774 people made such a request for protection for the first time in Germany, almost 47 percent more than in the previous year. In addition, around one million war refugees from Ukraine were admitted to Germany in 2022 who did not have to apply for asylum.

Read at stern+: Criminologist Christian Pfeiffer explains how migration and crime are related. And why Germany has managed to integrate the refugees relatively well despite everything.

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