A discussion has started up within the Interior Ministry (led by Seehofer, CSU) that centers on 'bad-boys', deportation, and Syria. ARD (public TV, Channel One) tells the basic story to this.
The police will openly admit that some of the increased crime (mostly drugs, to a lesser degree assault)...leads back to migrants, asylum-seekers, and immigrants from the past six years. Note here....the term 'some'.
It's a highly divided issue, with various explanations built into the issue. Crime generally increased after the Wall came down, and ease of access into Germany became a noted issue.
So there's this group of immigrants that the Interior Ministry have put on the list....that ought to be deported. Some are from African countries....some from the Middle East....some from Eastern Europe.
The topic comes up today because the Interior Ministry is viewing the idea of qualifying Syria as 'safe'. In simple terms, they suggest the civil war is over, and that folks on the 'bad-boy' list could then be forced back into Syria (if that was their home of record).
In two weeks, there will be this meeting where the safety factor is discussed.
The Foreign Ministry in disagreement (led by Mass, SPD)? Well, yeah....that's part of this big picture as well. They don't view Syria as 'safe'.
How many folks are on this deportation list, who might be Syrian? Unknown. This odd lacking bit of information was obvious in the news report. If we were only talking about six Syrian guys....it wouldn't be a big deal. If this were 300? It might be a sizeable topic to discuss.
The fact that it's almost all males on this list? It's best not to bring this topic up. It's hard to find any Syrian female who gets on such a list.
What generally happens to get on the bad-boy list? If you squeezed this topic enough....you'd find that most all of the folks (not just Syrian)....arrived in Germany and found this wonderful open society....that allowed drug distribution/sales to occur, and alcohol was freely marketed with no limitations. So they tried various drugs and got into a habit. Then they got into casual and increased alcohol situations. They went into stupid situations....got doped up or drunk....sometimes assaulting people at random, and triggering chaos.
The odds that Syria would even want these people back? I would suggest this is one issue by itself and barely mentioned in Berlin. If I were Assad of Syria....there's zero chance that I'd take the dopers back.
But here's the real issue at hand....2021 is an election year, and this stupid grouping of deportees is just standing there. Keeping the 'problem-children' in Germany doesn't make sense unless you were going to house them in prisons. The general public looks at the crime reports in newspapers, and typically ask....is this a German, or a migrant who committed the crime? Some news groups hide this fact, when telling a crime story....which just infuriates Germans even more.
It's a mess that needs resolution, but it's hard to see where this will come from, or how it'll work in the end.
2 comments:
The worst offenders are from Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco. And they all have the same retarded look on their face. Where is Einsatzgruppen B when you really need them.
I don't know if they are the worst offenders. In this group however, they generally all arrive with minimum education, no job skills, and kinda shocked at the complex nature of the German language.
I've met a lot of Syrians who really made a lot of effort to settle in and give a 100-percent on effort. I'd suggest the same for a number of Ghana guys who seemed proactive and less tangled up in petty crime, or drug situations.
The countries that had seem extreme control or harsh views over drugs and alcohol....are the ones that 'bad-boys' came from and quickly saw Germany as some 'Disneyland' for booze and hard-drugs.
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