How can you not be deported from Germany? EC spent €9 million on a guide for migrants

pch24.pl 9 months ago

The European Commission has allocated around €9 million to the Hanbook Germany net project, which instructs illegal migrants how to avoid deportation from the country, says Brussels Signal.

The German authorities, although rejecting any visitors on the 1 hand, not granting them visas and announcing that they will deport illegal migrants, on the another hand, together with the European Commission, are spending millions of euros on projects to avoid deportation.

This is evidenced by, for example, the measures assigned by the German Ministry of abroad Affairs and the European Commission to the creation of the Handbook Germany platform, where rejected asylum seekers are instructed to do what they gotta do to avoid being deported.

The advice indicates that parents cannot be deported if their underage kid is “missing”. Deportation may be postponed or cancelled if any "new" signs of "war trauma" or "harassment" that have not previously been identified. These are just any examples of recommendations.

"Brussels Signal" asked the EC to comment on this. The EC Ombudsman acknowledged that Neue deutsche Medienmacher*innen (New German media creators — NDM) received backing for a task called ‘Zentrale digitale Anlaustelle’ (Central Digital Contact Point).

Neue deutsche Medienmacher*innen (NdM) is an association that campaigns for greater diversity in journalism and against the “talk of hate” on the Internet. Through various projects, publications and campaigns, they supply information on the fight against discrimination at work and strengthening the position of colour journalists, as well as those from migration environments.

The circumstantial ‘Handbook Germany: Together (HBGT)’ task received backing under the circumstantial nonsubjective 2 (Integration and Legal Migration) of the German Asylum, Migration and Integration Fund (AMIF).

As the typical of the EU institutions added, a full of EUR 8,948,86,56 was allocated by the EC. The appropriations are due from 1 January 2023. The financing will end on 31 December 2025. The initiative is taken under the alleged shared management mode, according to which the EC has entrusted the German authorities with the choice of how to spend money.

‘In Germany, the national Migration and exile Office (BAMF) selects projects to finance and assumes work for regular task management under the German AMIF programme. The Commission does not carry out systematic checks on individual projects", the EU spokesperson pointed out, adding that "The Commission has in no way supported or contributed to the content on the Handbook Germany website".

In addition to the above-mentioned advice, Handbook Germany recommends visitors seeking asylum unsuccessfully to file a suit against BAMF. Readers are sent back via a link to the initiative "Abschiebungen stoppen. Bleiberecht für alle” (Stop deportations. Right of residence for all). The publishers of the parties state that they argue deportations for political reasons and request "the right to reside and freedom of movement for all".

The platform has made available flyers with information in many languages and a movie about what to do to force airline personnel to cancel deportation.

Immigrants are advised not only to obstruct, sue at the expense of the state, but besides to petition in the national parliament or Bundestag and search aid in churches.

"Even after the asylum application has been rejected, there are inactive certain options to stay in Germany", it is stated. The Handbook Germany pointed to the Dublin Regulation, which allows asylum applications to be considered "unacceptable" if another EU country is liable for examining the application. In specified cases, the asylum seeker may be transferred to that country within six months. If the asylum seeker submits an urgent request to competition that decision, he may reset the six-month transfer deadline.

Visitors were instructed that in the event of deportation, if they do not have cash, the police are obliged to spend pocket money on them.

Even after deportation, it is recommended to hire a lawyer and ask for aid for an organization specified as ProAsyl who defends the rights of immigrants.

Hanbook Germany says: “We inactive remember precisely what it feels like to be fresh in Germany. Most of the essential information is frequently only available in German – and it is not easy to find what you request on time. At the same time, social media is full of false news and misleading rumors. We know from our own experience that access to correct information and advice is very crucial to live independently and independently in Germany. That is why we have invested in the creation of a digital platform to supply the fresh arrivals with what they request most. Our Handbook Germany project: Together – a central digital contact point – combines the handbookgermany.de information platform, the social platform together-in-germany.de and the local information search engine to look for on-site support and advice. All our offers are available in 9 languages: German, Persian, English, Pashto, Turkish, French, Arabic, Ukrainian and Russian. due to the fact that everyone has the right to access information and support.”

It is recommended that you contact the social networking platform together-in-germany.de, where immigrants can receive detailed “confidential advice” from the squad and task experts and interact with another people to exchange ideas in their community.

In addition to the German Ministry, the national Commissioner for Combating Racism “co-finance” the project.

It is worth noting that Handbook Germany appeared online as early as 2017, and a year later it collected respective awards, including for online communications.

Although the task initiated Neue deutsche Medienmacher, the group received method and financial assistance from Adobe Systems and Deutsche Telekom. The handbookgermany.de portal itself is simply a improvement of the page refugees.telekom.de which Deutsche Telekom created in 2015 to facilitate migration.

In April 2018 handbookgermany.de received the Bronze Digital Award from the German Digital Economy Association (BVDW) in the Content Platform/Digital Magazines category. And at the Cologne movie Festival, initiated by the authorities of North Rhine-Westphalia, handbookgermany.de won the first prize in the category "Media and Migration".

Source: brusselssignal.com, handbookgermany.de, neuemedienmacher.de, telekom.com

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