News

Germany should strike a deal with the Taliban to facilitate the deportation of Afghan migrants, the country’s interior minister has said in a proposal that drew immediate anger from his coalition ...
German Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt wants to negotiate a direct agreement with the Taliban on receiving Afghan ...
Austria is preparing to deport a Syrian man whose asylum status was revoked due to a criminal conviction, in what an EU ...
The German parliament has passed a law, previously supported by the government, that suspends family reunification ...
BERLIN -- German lawmakers voted Friday to suspend family reunions for many migrants, part of a drive by the new conservative ...
Parliament has approved government plans to stop family members of refugees with subsidiary protection status from moving to ...
Eco-fascism: “the weaponization of climate change by far-right populist political parties and white supremacist groups.” ...
That’s what we see in this episode of Europeans’ Stories. There are around 1.3 million Syrian asylum-seekers and refugees in the European Union. Most of them live in Germany, Austria and Sweden.
Try Ask The Post AI. Ahead of elections next month, what to do with migrants — including the nearly 1 million Syrian refugees living here — has emerged as issue No. 1 for German voters.
Almost 6,000 of Germany’s doctors have a Syrian passport, and it’s estimated that 15,000–20,000 doctors in the country have a Syrian background.
On average, Syrian migrants have been living in Germany for eight years; most came with the wave of refugees in 2015.
DW meets him in the town of Bonn in western Germany, at a facility for migrants where 540 refugees are currently living, including 145 from Syria. Ali, from Damascus, says it is "good" that Assad ...