Tens of thousands of failed asylum seekers who were forced to leave Germany have made it back to, and living in the country once again.
A total of 28,283 migrants who applied for asylum in Germany since 2012 have made their way back to Germany, despite having been previously deported. Around 5,000 migrants have returned multiple times after they had been denied asylum, Die Welt reports.
About 1,023 migrants currently living in Germany have already applied for asylum at least four times. Another 294 have applied at least five times.
In response to these new revelations, Chair of the Interior Committee in the Bundestag Andrea Lindholz (CSU), said: “Any violation of an existing entry ban, which is basically imposed after deportations, must end immediately in detention.”
Since 2010, Germany has accepted more than two million migrants.
About 40 percent of all welfare recipients in German are foreigners, costing German taxpayers more than 4 billion euros each month.
In the year 2040, over one third (35 percent) of Germany’s population is expected to be made up migrants or those with migrant roots, Voice of Europe reported last month.
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