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The number of refugees from the Middle East is growing in Germany

Germany (bbabo.net), - The number of asylum seekers from Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq and Turkey has risen sharply in Germany.

In Bavaria alone, the number of new arrivals has increased five-fold in a short period of time. It is expected that more than 200,000 illegal migrants from non-European countries could flood into Germany by the end of 2022, in addition to the many hundreds of thousands of refugees from Ukraine.

Junge Freiheit columnist Michael Paulwitz comments on the situation:

“They [the new refugees] could be the vanguard of a massive offensive: 3.7 million Syrians still live in Turkey and are becoming increasingly unpopular there. Erdogan wants to get rid of half of them by the 2023 presidential election. Very few of them will find accommodation in his settlement project in the occupied territories of the Syrian Kurds. For the rest of the masses, further travel to the promised “German welfare state” is likely to be the more attractive option.”

In the first eight months of 2022, Frontex recorded 188,200 illegal EU border crossings, up 75% on the same period last year.

“This is the highest level since 2016,” the agency notes. — Most of the illegal migrants go along the Mediterranean and Balkan routes. Thus, on the Western Balkan route, the number of illegal entries increased by 141%.

The Minister of the Interior of Saxony, Armin Schuster, has already compared what is happening with a similar situation in the crisis year of 2015. It's only a matter of time before a return to campgrounds and gymnasium inns, he says.

The German expert community is sounding the alarm about how to feed the new population of migrants. Junge Freiheit reviewer Michael Paulwitz states:

“The ruling coalition has already shown an incomprehensible negligence with respect to scarce resources when they accepted Ukrainian military refugees. The failure to properly register arrivals and the immediate opening of the welfare system for Ukrainians has created incentives for abuse and irreversible consequences that thwart humanitarian declarations of intent.”

The chairman of the district council of Baden-Württemberg, Joachim Walter, has already announced a new kind of "Ukrainian gesheft". According to him, daily fully booked bus tours from Ukrainian cities to Germany and back raise suspicions of the widespread “charity tourism”.

The number of refugees from the Middle East is growing in Germany