In an interview with the Bavarian newspaper Augsburger Allgemeine, Markus Söder called for a radical transformation of the immigration policy.
Germany is overwhelmed by the migration crisis, the financial and cultural dangers of which were warned by Markus Söder, the president of the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU) and the prime minister of Bavaria, the Migration Research Institute told MTI on Tuesday.
They wrote that Markus Söder called for a radical overhaul of immigration policy in an interview with the Bavarian newspaper Augsburger Allgemeine.
"Many people no longer feel at home in Germany, German is barely spoken in some school classrooms, and some of the refugees are responsible for violent attacks such as the knife attacks in Mannheim and Solingen"
Markus Söder is quoted as saying, adding that the politician's proposals included limiting the right to asylum and limiting the number of asylum seekers to 100,000 per year.
According to their press release, Söder emphasized that Germany must decide who can cross the borders, and those who are not entitled to do so must be sent back to their country, even if it is Syria or Afghanistan.
They informed: among the proposals of the CSU, it is possible to reject asylum seekers at the external borders, and those whose asylum applications are assessed will wait for the results in a third country. The party would also support agreements with gatekeeper countries such as Tunisia and Egypt and proposed the abolition of dual citizenship for criminals, they added.
They also pointed out that in terms of security in Germany, Afghans and Syrians are the biggest threat, an Afghan was behind the stabbing in Mannheim, and the attack in Solingen was carried out by a Syrian migrant.
They also indicated that, according to the statistics for kindergarten students, one in five children between the ages of 3 and 6 all over the country does not use German at home, and in Hesse, Berlin and Bremen, one in three uses another language at home.
Cover image: Sanger Ahmadi Afghan migrant German criminal organization / Twitter