City
Epaper

German Minister slams country's ‘strict’ immigration authorities: Report

By IANS | Updated: November 8, 2023 13:15 IST

Berlin, Nov 8 Germany's Economy Minister Robert Habeck has said that the country's immigration authorities may be too ...

Open in App

Berlin, Nov 8 Germany's Economy Minister Robert Habeck has said that the country's immigration authorities may be too hostile to foreigners at a time when more skilled workers are required to plug the looming labour shortage.

Habeck said at a recent conference in Berlin that his "greatest concern" is that immigration and visa authorities have not yet switched to the new system, the euractiv news website reported on Wednesday.

"Previously, Germany had set up administrative structures that were hostile towards workers from abroad who were perceived as strangers," Habeck said, adding, “now we have to state clearly: now we want them, (…) please approve it”,

Germany is facing a massive shortage of skilled workers, making the country's aging population dependent on immigration.

According to the Institute for Employment Research, the shortage could reach 7 million workers by 2035 unless sufficient counter-measures were taken.

While Germany needs migrants to tackle labour shortages, a recent surge in irregular migration has been difficult for the country to handle with several migrants, especially from Syria, Afghanistan and Turkey, seeking shelter in the country.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Tuesday agreed to a stricter migration policy and said the measures would help speed up asylum procedures, restrict social benefits for migrants, and provide more federal funding for local communities.

Habeck, however, said that Germany should also embrace the potential of irregular migrants, as it could hardly afford to be picky or ideologically driven, euractiv reported.

“We need all of (those who have proved themselves),” Habeck said.

In July this year, the German government gave its final approval to a law that will make it easier for skilled workers from outside the EU to move to Germany.

Expected to come into force in three steps in November 2023, March 2024 and June 2024, it could increase the number of non-EU workers in Germany by 60,000 per year.

In 2022, Indians were issued the highest number of work visas by Germany.

Of a total of 152,336 national work visas issued to foreigners, Indians were granted a total of 17,379 work visas last year.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalTaiwanese Vice President Hsiao Bi-khim slams CCP's coercion tactics, says Taiwan will not bow to Beijing's pressure

CricketPath towards Sachin: Joe Root 120 runs away from becoming 2nd-highest Test run-getter, sitting next to Indian icon

NationalHyderabad-Jodhpur daily express train from July 20

EntertainmentFrom Silver Screen to Streaming: Actors Who Conquered Both Cinemas and OTT

TechnologyPolitical stability, robust policy push creating conducive investment climate: Sunil Mittal

International Realted Stories

InternationalPakistan's occupation chokes free press in PoJK: Journalists unpaid, silenced, fired while owners pocket state funds

InternationalSouth Korea, US, Japan reaffirm 'strong' North Korean deterrence in high-level diplomatic talks

InternationalJD-U, Shiv Sena hail US decision to designate TRF as terror outfit; Cong attacks Govt over Pahalgam attack

InternationalRussia dismisses EU's latest sanctions package as 'illegal'

InternationalSouth Korea: Farmers threaten collective action against possible opening of agro market to US