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Discouraged By Delays In Germany, Some Migrants Opt To Return Home

Migrants and refugees seeking asylum in Sarstedt, Germany, line up Feb. 26 for lunch at the shelter where they live while their asylum applications are processed. Germany wants to send more migrants home and sent a charter plane filled with Afghan migrants back to Kabul on Wednesday.
Alexander Koerner
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Getty Images
Migrants and refugees seeking asylum in Sarstedt, Germany, line up Feb. 26 for lunch at the shelter where they live while their asylum applications are processed. Germany wants to send more migrants home and sent a charter plane filled with Afghan migrants back to Kabul on Wednesday.

Like many European countries, Germany wants to send more asylum seekers back home. The German parliament passed several laws on Thursday that make it easier to deport migrants. The day before, Chancellor Angela Merkel's government sent a charterplane filled with Afghan migrants back to Kabul.

Many asylum seekers say they've gotten the message — and aren't waiting to be shown the door. They're going home voluntarily, rather than being forced back.

On a recent afternoon, Terminal C at the Berlin Tegel Airport is packed with people waiting to take the weekly Iraqi Airways flight back to Baghdad and Erbil. Most are Iraqi asylum seekers who've given up trying to make it in Germany.

Going home after four months are Duaa al-Buhaider and her two preschool-aged children. Her mother, Bushra al-Fahad, pats her shoulder. She says the reason her daughter and family are leaving is because of the delays in getting their case decided, as well as what they say is rude treatment by the very government workers who are supposed to help.

Fahad, who has been a refugee in Germany for the past six years, invited her daughter and grandkids to live in her two-room apartment so they wouldn't be stuck outdoors in a camp during the cold winter months. But her German landlord forbade it, saying he didn't want that many people in the small apartment.

Frustration overwhelms the 47-year-old grandmother and she starts to cry. "Of course we prefer to stay in our country. We don't choose to be migrants. So why do they make it so hard?" she says.

Firefighters try to extinguish a blaze Feb. 16 at a former hotel under reconstruction to become a home for asylum seekers in Bautzen, Germany. A crowd cheered and chanted anti-migrant slogans during the fire, which is being investigated as arson.
Rico Loeb / AFP/Getty Images
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AFP/Getty Images
Firefighters try to extinguish a blaze Feb. 16 at a former hotel under reconstruction to become a home for asylum seekers in Bautzen, Germany. A crowd cheered and chanted anti-migrant slogans during the fire, which is being investigated as arson.

Bernd Mesovic of the German refugee rights group PRO ASYL has the same question. He accuses the government of using delays as a tactic to encourage more people to leave. And while asylum seekers wait, they are denied benefits and language classes, which adds to their frustration, Mesovic says.

Exactly how many asylum seekers are choosing to leave Germany is hard to say. The government only keeps track of the small number seeking official help with their return. That amounted to 724 Iraqis last year. Nearly 10 times as many went back to Iraq in December as in July.

That's OK with Stephan Mayer, who is with the German ruling coalition's parliamentary group in charge of home affairs. He says parts of Iraq are safe, especially now that ISIS has withdrawn from some areas.

"It's not so difficult to live there in Kurdistan and northern Iraq," he says, "so I don't see any problem if those from Iraq turn back to Erbil."

Mayer denies the delays in claims processing are deliberate. But he says if asylum seekers who go home dissuade others from coming to Germany, so much the better.

Back at the airport, Iraqi Ahmed al-Jawad, who'd hoped for asylum in Germany, says he'll be taking that message back to his friends and family in Baghdad. Dying in Iraq, he says, is better than being humiliated here.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Special correspondent Soraya Sarhaddi Nelson is based in Berlin. Her reports can be heard on NPR's award-winning programs, including Morning Edition and All Things Considered, and read at NPR.org. From 2012 until 2018 Nelson was NPR's bureau chief in Berlin. She won the ICFJ 2017 Excellence in International Reporting Award for her work in Central and Eastern Europe, North Africa, the Middle East and Afghanistan.