Home Europe Germany, EU Allies Urge Tougher Asylum Rules, Increased Deportations

Germany, EU Allies Urge Tougher Asylum Rules, Increased Deportations

Germany’s new government has imposed migration curbs—including halting family reunification and resettlement—to win back voters who shifted to the far-right AfD in February’s election.
European Commissioner for Internal Affairs and Migration Magnus Brunner, Danish Minister of Immigration and Integration Kaare Dybvad Bek, French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau, German Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt, Parliamentary State Secretary to the Federal Minister of the Interior Daniela Ludwig, Polish Interior Minister Tomasz Siemoniak, Austrian Interior Minister Gerhard Karner, and Czech Interior Minister Vit Rakusan meet to discuss migration policies, during Zugspitze Summit, near Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, July 18, 2025. REUTERS/Angelika Warmuth

Germany’s Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt and five European counterparts agreed on Friday on goals to tighten EU asylum rules, including permitting deportations to Afghanistan and Syria.

The meeting at Germany’s highest peak, the Zugspitze, follows Berlin’s decision in May to reject asylum seekers at the border, a policy it said was coordinated with neighbouring countries but drew significant criticism.

It comes almost exactly a decade after former German Chancellor Angela Merkel opened the country’s borders to nearly a million refugees fleeing war and persecution, a landmark decision that reshaped European politics.

Dobrindt met counterparts from France, Poland, Austria, the Czech Republic and Denmark, as well as EU Home Affairs Commissioner Magnus Brunner.

The agreed asylum policy goals, which require approval from Brussels, include removing legislative obstacles to transferring rejected asylum seekers to secure centres outside the EU and enabling asylum procedures in third countries.

German Migration Curbs

Germany’s new government has already placed curbs on migration, including suspending family reunification and resettlement programmes, as it seeks to regain support from voters drawn to the far-right Alternative for Germany, which made historic gains in February’s federal election. On Friday, Germany deported 81 Afghan men to Afghanistan.

“We are all concerned that the overburdening of our countries by illegal migration is also contributing massively to the polarisation of society. We want to push back this polarisation,” Dobrindt said.


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Deportations to countries such as Afghanistan and Syria should be reinstated as standard practice, with citizens from countries failing to cooperate on deportations to face visa restrictions, a joint declaration said.

Trade and development aid will also be used as leverage to boost returns and strengthen migration cooperation, the document said, pressing for increasing deployment of drones and more EU funding for border infrastructure and personnel.

The countries agreed to combat smugglers and work to dismantle human trafficking networks.

Asylum seekers who have already been granted protection in another EU country will be quickly rejected if they claim asylum elsewhere in the bloc.

“Once we seal the external border, there will be no need for internal border controls,” Polish Interior Minister Tomasz Siemoniak said.

Siemoniak said he discussed the border controls Germany introduced unilaterally at its border with Dobrindt, adding that Poland is ready to waive the controls at its border once Germany does the same.

(With inputs from Reuters)