Berlin court blocks push-back of Eritrean asylum-seeker, undermining Germany’s border rejection policy
EU Parliament clears path for offshore ‘return hubs’, Germany signals support
EU Blue Card 2026: Higher salary thresholds and stricter employer compliance kick in
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Federal microcensus shows more than four million refugees now live in Germany
Official microcensus figures released on 18 June show Germany hosting 4 million refugees, with Syrians and Ukrainians making up nearly half. The data spotlight both the integration challenge and a sizeable talent pool that policymakers want to channel into labour-short sectors through faster credential recognition and vocational programmes.
German Institute for Human Rights urges Berlin to guarantee access to asylum after GEAS launch
On 18 June the German Institute for Human Rights warned that new EU asylum rules and Germany’s border practices risk violating the Refugee Convention. The watchdog urged Berlin to guarantee access to asylum procedures, criticising accelerated GEAS border processing and detention. Its stance foreshadows stricter oversight of how authorities—and by extension employers—handle migrants and humanitarian applicants.
Berlin court orders compensation for racial profiling during police ID check
On 18 June a Berlin court ordered the state to pay €500 to a Black man unlawfully singled out during a police stop, citing racial discrimination. The ruling could reshape identity-check protocols at Germany’s internal borders—information global-mobility teams should incorporate into traveller-safety guidelines.
Commentary: ‘EU law trumps AsylG’—Berlin court verdict sparks political backlash
An 18 June Apollo News editorial lambasted the Berlin court decision against push-backs, framing it as proof that EU law overrules German sovereignty. The polemic highlights escalating domestic tensions over migration and signals potential policy volatility affecting cross-border business travel.
Civil-society blog ‘Omas gegen Rechts’ decries GEAS entry into force, warns of rights erosion
A 18 June blogpost by Omas gegen Rechts provides a critical breakdown of GEAS rules that took effect on 12 June, alleging they institutionalise detention and ‘non-entry’. Though activism-oriented, the piece reflects a growing civil-society watchdog environment that companies should factor into CSR risk analysis.
German Interior Ministers Convene in Hamburg to Tighten Migration Rules
Germany’s interior ministers launched a three-day conference in Hamburg on 17 June, dominated by proposals to accelerate deportations of foreign criminals and to adapt national law to the EU’s new asylum regime. Federal and state officials are split on whether to reopen returns to Syria and how far to lower legal hurdles, while businesses fear reputational damage if skilled migrants feel insecure. The meeting’s decisions will shape border-control staffing, the treatment of protection holders and long-term talent strategy.