How will asylum procedures be conducted in Germany

Accelerated asylum procedures, all under a large roof. This is simplifiedly stated the idea of so-called migrants' transfer centres, also known as the “Anker” centre. Until 1500 refugees will be sheltered in such a centre. And they will stay there until they know what [they] do....
Accelerated asylum procedures, all under a large roof. This is simplifiedly stated the idea of so-called migrants' transfer centres, also known as the “Anker” centre. Until 1500 refugees will be sheltered in such a centre. And they'll stay there until they know what will happen next to them.
If a positive answer is given to asylum demand, asylum seekers will be sent to a municipality as yet. But when the demand for asylum is refused, the deportation will take place directly from the immigrant transfer center. In each of the seven centres in Bavari, which have been opened since one August, there will also be representatives of the Land Foreign Office, the Federal Office of Migration and Refugees (BAMF) of the Federal Labour and Administrative Courts Agency, Bravarie Interior Minister Joachim Herrman (CSU) said before the press.
The testing phase for Anker (conception consists of the first letters of the word Ancuft (= arrival), Entscheidung (= decision) and Rückführung (=Reatdition) will last about half a year, then the first scores for performance will be made. Only after that is the German government obliged to establish a legal basis and would need land support for it.
A declared goal of migrants' transfer centres is to speed up decisions on asylum. But if this works in practice, that's why Werner Schiffauer suspects. He is the chairman of the Headship of the Migration Council.
In clear cases -- first of all of the Syrians -- coming directly from war zones -- procedures will certainly accelerate. But what doesn't change at all are the difficult cases, for example, of refugees from Afghanistan, who have partially fled for the second time”.
The processing of their demands will take as long as it now fears. This shows the experience in Manning and Bamberg”. In both basic accession camps that have now sheltered over 1,000 people. People stick together without jobs and no perspectives and are isolated to a considerable extent from the outside world. This is what refugee organizations criticize.
“10 per cent of the residents in Manning have been there since 18 months”, criticises the Bavarez Council for Refugees in a press release. People suffer in these large camps, according to the statement, among other things from the “ban on working, the obligation to stay in the camp, the removal of the opportunity for cash, the lack of German courses, and the lack of learning in schools”, further said.
According to Horst Seehofer (CSU), in fact, no one should stay more than 18 months at these centres. “Attitude time is set: for families six months, for everyone else 18 months”, Federal Interior Minister said in a speech before Bundestag in May.












