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Refugees arrive at the central railway station in Passau, southern Germany.
Refugees arrive at the central railway station in Passau, southern Germany. Photograph: Christof Stache/AFP/Getty Images
Refugees arrive at the central railway station in Passau, southern Germany. Photograph: Christof Stache/AFP/Getty Images

Germany expects up to 300,000 refugees in 2016, official says

This article is more than 7 years old

Projected figure is far less than 2015 total, with good economy and improved services expected to help country absorb arrivals

Germany expects up to 300,000 refugees to arrive this year, less than one-third of the total during 2015’s record influx, the federal office for migrants and refugees (BAMF) has said.

Frank-Jürgen Weise, the head of BAMF, told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper Germany’s healthy economy and improvements to refugee services over the past year meant the country was well placed to absorb new arrivals, particularly as their numbers have dropped off.

“We are preparing for between 250,000 and 300,000 refugees this year,” he said. “We can ensure optimal services for up to 300,000. Should more people arrive, it would put us under pressure, then we would go into so-called crisis mode. But even then we would not have conditions like last year.”

Nearly 1.1 million refugees arrived in Germany, Europe’s top economic power, last year, putting enormous strain on the country’s bureaucracy to process claims and testing confidence in Angela Merkel’s right-left coalition government.

The closure of the so-called Balkan migrant trail and an EU deal with Turkey to keep refugees from reaching Greece – a main entry point into the bloc – has driven down arrivals from the Middle East and Afghanistan.

Weise said his agency had made major strides in working through a large backlog in asylum claims but that it would not manage to clear the remaining 530,000 cases by the end of the year. He said integrating those allowed to stay in Germany into the labour market would be a lengthy and costly process.

Weise was upbeat about the long-term prospects. “We can do it,” he said, echoing Merkel’s rallying cry during the crisis. “A lot of what was going badly in the beginning [one year ago] we’ve eventually managed to do pretty well. And the economy in Germany is so good, thank God, that we can afford it.”

Public sentiment is nevertheless sharply divided when it comes to Merkel, who has not yet said whether she would stand for a fourth term in a general election expected next September or October. Bild am Sonntag cited a poll by the independent opinion research group Emnid showing 50% of respondents opposed another four-year term for Merkel, while 42% said they wanted her to stay in office.

More on this story

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