Think twice before coming, Germany tells Afghan would-be migrants

'This is not about deterrence but about getting people to think it through,' said a foreign ministry spokesman


Afp November 16, 2015
PHOTO: DW

BERLIN: Germany has launched a campaign in Afghanistan to tell its nationals to think carefully before embarking on the tough journey to seek asylum in Europe, the foreign ministry said Monday.

"This is not about deterrence but about getting people to think it through," said a foreign ministry spokesman.

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Billboards bearing slogans in Dari and Pashtu including "Leaving Afghanistan? Are you sure?" or "Leaving Afghanistan? Thought it through?" have been put up at prominent sites in the capital Kabul, as well as in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif and Herat in the west.

The foreign ministry has also turned to social media, including Facebook and Twitter, to send the message to Afghans, including by explaining the dangers of putting their lives in the hands of human traffickers.

Germany also stressed that it was continuing to help stabilise Afghanistan and that it was therefore "crucial that Afghans themselves don't turn their backs on their homeland, but stay and build the future of their country together with us".

Alarmed by the high numbers of Afghans who are seeking asylum in Germany, Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere had come out in late October to urge young citizens of the South Asian nation to stay home and rebuild their homeland.

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"There is an increasing number of citizens from the middle class, also from Kabul, and we are in agreement with the Afghan government that young Afghans from middle class families should stay in their country and rebuild it," said de Maiziere.

He acknowledged that there remain security concerns in Afghanistan, and that the country could not qualify as a "safe origin" country - a category which would have led to blanket refusals of asylum requests.

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Between January and October, some 758,473 people filed requests for asylum in Germany, including 67,191 Afghans -- making them the third largest group of applicants, after Syrians and Albanians, for the period.

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