Admission stop for integration courses draws SPD criticism

The Federal Office for Migration and Refugees has announced an admission stop for non-mandatory integration courses, prompting criticism from the SPD parliamentary group. SPD parliamentary manager Dirk Wiese calls the measure hasty and harmful to the economy. The Turkish Community in Germany also expresses dissatisfaction.

In Berlin, the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF) informed integration course providers on Monday that no further participants will be admitted indefinitely if the course is not mandatory for them. This affects asylum seekers in process, tolerated persons, EU migrants, and Ukrainian refugees. The reason given is the costs of the courses. The BAMF is under the Federal Ministry of the Interior.

The announcement immediately drew opposition from the SPD parliamentary group. Parliamentary manager Dirk Wiese expressed irritation on Wednesday: "Very irritated by these reports. The last word has not been spoken yet." He criticized the "hasty measures" from the office of Federal Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt (CSU) as a disservice to the German economy. Wiese stressed that Germany urgently needs skilled workers and immigration, for which integration courses are the best way to take root here.

Gökay Sofuoglu, chairman of the Turkish Community in Germany, reacted similarly. To the RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland (RND), he said: "A one-sided admission stop for language and integration courses undermines exactly the instruments that enable people to participate in the labor market and society." He added: "Language is participation — that is a strong and factual argument for such courses. Therefore, I consider the cuts wrong." Sofuoglu called for forward-looking policies instead of short-sighted budget blocks that could destroy the painstakingly built integration network.

Artículos relacionados

German Interior Minister Dobrindt at press conference announcing asylum seekers can work after 3 months instead of 6, with hopeful workers in foreground.
Imagen generada por IA

Dobrindt plans shorter wait for working asylum seekers

Reportado por IA Imagen generada por IA

Federal Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt (CSU) aims to ease the employment ban for asylum seekers, allowing them to work after three instead of six months. The proposal is praised by the German Institute for Economic Research (DIW) and the SPD, while the Union sees limited impact. The announcement contrasts with planned cuts to integration courses.

In 2025, the EU has returned asylum seekers to Germany in only a few cases despite numerous requests. The Bundestag recently transposed the Common European Asylum System (GEAS) into German law to combat secondary migration. Federal states can now establish centers for deportable refugees.

Reportado por IA

The EPP group in the EU Parliament has closely cooperated with the AfD and other right-wing parties on a proposal to tighten migration policy, as dpa research reveals. This occurred in a WhatsApp group and a meeting on March 4. The proposal for 'Return Hubs' gained a majority in the committee with support from right-wing MEPs.

At the opening of the Leipzig Book Fair, Culture Minister Wolfram Weimer (independent) was interrupted by boos from the audience. The criticism targets his decision to exclude three leftist bookstores from the German Book Trade Prize due to constitution protection concerns. Several hundred people demonstrated against his cultural policy outside the Gewandhaus.

Reportado por IA

The CDU Women's Union has submitted a motion to ban the burka and niqab in public spaces ahead of the party congress. Coalition partner SPD opposes it, warning against patronizing women. The debate revives old controversies over women's rights and freedoms.

Una moción de la oposición de los Partidos Verde e Izquierda para una moratoria inmediata en todas las deportaciones de adolescentes —incluidas las decisiones legalmente vinculantes— fue rechazada por poco en el parlamento, 148-147. Esto sigue al anuncio del gobierno la semana pasada de una pausa limitada a la espera de nuevas leyes. Los críticos lo llaman una traición, mientras los ministros buscan una solución pronto.

Reportado por IA

North Rhine-Westphalia's Labor Minister Karl-Josef Laumann has sharply criticized his CDU party's wording in the debate over 'lifestyle part-time work.' The CDU deputy chairman calls for more tact and emphasizes that Germans are diligent. He considers the economic wing's proposal unlikely to pass.

 

 

 

Este sitio web utiliza cookies

Utilizamos cookies para análisis con el fin de mejorar nuestro sitio. Lee nuestra política de privacidad para más información.
Rechazar