Just in:
South Korean Won Emerges as Global Leader in Crypto Trading // Exodus at OKX: Key Executives Depart Leading Cryptocurrency Exchange // Economic impact of UAE’s rain havoc // House of Streams, Presented by SHRIMP.co (Stream House Media Productions Ltd.), Premieres as an Original Reality Series in Spring 2024 // Schneider Electric and NVIDIA Redefine AI Data Center Design for Performance and Efficiency // Travelers Advised to Confirm Flights Before Heading to Dubai Airport’s Terminal 1 // Charting the Course: Will Ripple Navigate Regulatory Seas to Reach New Heights? // Political Upheaval in India as BJP Leader Kidnapped in Arunachal Pradesh // Rich Correll’s “Hollywood’s Icons of Darkness” Passes 2000 Collectors Item Mark // Distant World Reveals Signs of Potential Habitation // Kingdom Ramps Up Oil Output as Global Prices Reach New Heights // Zayed International Airport Maintains Normal Operations // INDIA Bloc Has An Edge Over NDA In First Phase Of Lok Sabha Election 2024 // Yeebo Passes Resolution at SGM on Disposal of 20.02% Equity Interest in Nantong Jianghai // Dubai Anticipates Rise in Water Consumption // Physicianonfire.com and Coinclub.news Announce Cryptocurrency Media Partnership // Telegram Founder Prioritizes Neutrality and Personal Freedom in Candid Interview // UAE Extends Warm Wishes to Bahamas on Independence Day // Embracing TradeTech: UAE Paves the Path for a Sustainable, Accessible Trading Future // VinFast Reports Unaudited First Quarter 2024 Financial Results //
HomeWorldGermany's Schaeuble admits 'mistakes' in refugee policy

Germany's Schaeuble admits 'mistakes' in refugee policy

ADVERTISEMENT

BERLIN Germany made mistakes with an open-door policy that saw more than a million migrants enter Germany over the past two years, Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble acknowledged on Sunday, but he said Berlin was trying to learn from those missteps.

“We have tried to improve what got away from us in 2015,” Schaeuble told the newspaper Welt am Sonntag. “We politicians are human; we also make mistakes. But one can at least learn from them.”

Schaeuble is a member of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative Christian Democrats, who have lost support to the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) party over the migration issue, after several attacks carried out by migrants.

The AfD is now poised to become the third largest party in parliament in September national elections.

The issue has also divided the European Union, with many countries balking at taking in a proportional share of refugees.

Schaeuble said Europe needed to consider harmonising its social benefits to achieve a more equitable distribution of migrants among EU members, a subject that he said had thus far been considered “taboo” in Germany.

“We have much higher standards when it comes to social benefits than most European countries. That’s why so many want to come to Germany,” he told the newspaper.

Schaeuble also said he was sceptical about the leadership style of the U.S. President Donald Trump, who has sparked concerns among European leaders with executive orders on immigration, as well as his decision to cancel trade agreements.

“In America, we can now see how someone is acting as if he can do everything very quickly. That will not only have good results,” he said.

A poll conducted earlier this month showed that refugee policy would be the biggest issue for voters in the September election.

Merkel, who is seeking a fourth term in office, spoke by telephone on Saturday with Trump, who has described her August 2015 decision to keep Germany’s borders open to refugees, mostly from the Middle East, as a “catastrophic mistake.”

In September, after a defeat for her Christian Democratic Union (CDU) in a Berlin state election, Merkel said she wished she could turn back the clock on the migrant crisis, although she stopped short of saying her policy was a mistake.

Merkel has rejected calls from the CDU’s Bavarian sister party to set an upper limit on migration, but is now pressing for more aggressive steps to send back migrants who are refused asylum, as well as action to prevent a similar flood of migrant from Africa.

(Reporting by Andrea Shalal, editing by Larry King)

-Reuters

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT
Just in:
House of Streams, Presented by SHRIMP.co (Stream House Media Productions Ltd.), Premieres as an Original Reality Series in Spring 2024 // Travelers Advised to Confirm Flights Before Heading to Dubai Airport’s Terminal 1 // Telegram Founder Prioritizes Neutrality and Personal Freedom in Candid Interview // Rich Correll’s “Hollywood’s Icons of Darkness” Passes 2000 Collectors Item Mark // Why earnings season matters // Coffee that Cares: 7CAFÉ Marks Earth Day With the New Limited-Edition Pistachio Flavoured Cereal Oat Milk Coffee and Enjoy Bring Your Own Cup Buy One Get One Free Offer on All 7CAFÉ Drinks // Distant World Reveals Signs of Potential Habitation // Embracing TradeTech: UAE Paves the Path for a Sustainable, Accessible Trading Future // Putien at Galaxy Macau Marks Anniversary with Culinary Extravagant Showcase Featuring Authentic Fujian Delicacies by Six-hands Awarded Chefs // Economic impact of UAE’s rain havoc // UAE Extends Warm Wishes to Bahamas on Independence Day // Alliance to End Plastic Waste Solution Model Playbooks Document Comprehensive and Integrated Solutions to Enable Plastic Circularity // Saudi Petrochemical Industry Faces Headwinds in 2024 // Abu Dhabi Police on High Alert for Potential Weather Disruptions // Dubai Anticipates Rise in Water Consumption // Exodus at OKX: Key Executives Depart Leading Cryptocurrency Exchange // VinFast Reports Unaudited First Quarter 2024 Financial Results // Yeebo Passes Resolution at SGM on Disposal of 20.02% Equity Interest in Nantong Jianghai // Arup and WWF to establish Nature-based Solutions standards for Hong Kong’s rural development // Political Upheaval in India as BJP Leader Kidnapped in Arunachal Pradesh //