Jamal Karsli, a former German MP, with Syrian origins, a political activist for more than 30 years and a strong supporter to the Syrian
revolution since its start on March 15, 2011.
Eqtsad, Zaman Alwasl business newspaper, has an opportunity to interview him to get
information about different ways of getting residency and asylum in Germany
especially for Syrians.
In Summary Karsli has identified three methods to get an asylum in
Germany, each of them has its own problems and obstacles.
Syrians can enter Germany and get the residency either via the
UNHCR in Lebanon which has agreed to gives an entry to 5 thousands Syrians, and
the other way is by an invitation from a relative, who has German nationality,
and the last is the illegal way, where people manage to get to Europe land
illegally and travel from country to another till arriving to Germany.
The former MP said that number of Syrians who arrived to Germany
by different means reach to 18 thousand. He confirmed that the German
authorities is willing to admit only 5 thousand Syrians via UNHCR in Lebanon,
out of more than a million Syrian refugees in Lebanon, on condition they are
officially registered with the UNHCR and the Lebanese government agrees to let
them leave the country.
“in fact, out of those 5 thousands, only 110 refugees have arrived
Germany coming from Beirut airport to Hanover Airport, then they were
transferred to an interim residential centre near Göttingen city to be
distributed to other German cities later on”, Karsli confirmed.
The MP has explained that arriving to Germany and getting
residency application via the UNHCR, is shorter than other ways, because
applications would be already accepted as far as security check is concerned,
as it would be done before selection in first place. He added that people who
entered Germany in this way can work and study during the two years legal
residence they will be granted, which could be extended if the situation in
Syria remained unchanged. However, if the situation improved, the German
government might return these people to Syria, as it had done previously with
refugees from Kosovo, Bosnia, Afghanistan and other countries.
Karsli added that there is another legal way to entered Germany
and live in, which is sending an invitation to first degree relatives
“offspring and parents” and second degree “brothers, sisters, grandparents
grandsons and granddaughters, minors and their wives”. The MP mentioned that 14
German states out of 16, have agreed to give visas and temporary leave to
remain to a limited number of Syrians who were invited by their relatives.
“However, those who want to invite their relatives in Syria need
to have German nationality or indefinite leave to remain or limited leave to
remain since the beginning of 2013. The inviter would be responsible for all
expenses and must have around € 350- 400 monthly surpluses for each person, in
other words, those who can invite their relatives are only the affluent people”
the former MP said.
Karsli highlighted the health insurance problem for invited
relatives which is considered a major obstacle, because German law does not
allow joining relatives to the inviter’s insurance. But he assured that some
states have overcome this obstacle by forwarding the health insurance costs to
municipalities where the inviter lives.
“The invitees should have clean records for criminal and terrorist
acts and have lost their homes and live in Syria, Egypt or one of the neighbouring
countries of Syria” Karsli detailed.
According to the former MP, applications are made in German
embassies or consulates abroad, in the same time the inviter applies for the invitation
in foreign office in his city of residence.
In regard to the people who illegally entered Germany, the former
MP said: “they can submit asylum application orally or in writing to any
government office in Germany, even at police stations, and then those offices
refer them to nearest refugees and foreigners’ agency. Those agencies are
controlled by the Federal Office for expatriates and refugees and there are
about 20 offices of them all over Germany.”
About the procedure later on for asylum seekers, Karsli said:
“applicant has to attend personally and formally submit his application, noting
that the Federal Office for Refugees is usually located inside the refugee
reception centre which has a police and a medical section besides restaurants
and sleeping rooms. That place became the temporary residence for refugees
after the asylum application. Registration, photographs and fingerprints are
taken later in the same centre. After a short stay for few weeks, refugees are
distributed to different German cities. Months later, asylum seekers are
invited for an interview to detail reasons for their application, and the
application is then put for study and decision”
If the application was rejected, Asylum seeker can appeal to the
nearest court specialized in law of administrative affairs, Karsli added.
Karsli gave a main reason for rejecting the application which is
getting an evidence that asylum seeker had lived in another European country or
came to Germany through that country, as he could be deported to that country,
because German law stipulates that asylum seekers must submit their asylum
application in the first safe country they arrive.
Usually, all applications from Syrian asylum seekers are accepted,
and even if they were rejected, which is rarely happens; it is not possible to
deport refugees to Syria in these circumstances.
Asylum seekers get leave to remain for two or three years, which
is extendable and they have the right to work and study.
By Eyad al-Ja'fari, Translation by Yusra Ahmed
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