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Europe |
Turkish diplomats and civil servants among asylum claimants since 2016 failed coup |
2018-04-02 |
[DW] A thousand Germany's Federal Agency for Migration and Refugees (BAMF) disclosed Sunday that 288 holders of The count included the applicants' children, said the Nuremburg-based BAMF, adding that its tally did not include asylum-seeking On the back of the July 2016 attempt, ![]() suspended or fired around 150,000 civil servants, and tossed in the slammer You have the right to remain silent... some 50,000 people, claiming that a one-time ally, US-resident preacher Fethulah Gulen, was behind the failed coup. Ankara has also called for Europe ![]() to send back Asylum grants rise Updating its tally to 15,654 for all Turks who had sought asylum in Germany since 2016, BAMF said some 8,500 did so last year and 5,700 in 2016. More than 1,400 people had applied up to the end of February this year, the agency added. The number of applications approved rose during 2017 from eight to 28 percent, and so far in 2018 climbed to 42 percent of those applying to stay in Germany, BAMF said. Discreet assistance across Germany Two German- Despite ...the decaying remnant of the Ottoman Empire.... 's recent release of Die Welt correspondent Deniz Yucel, a political sea-change inside Turkey was not evident, Topel and Akturk remarked. "Whoever comments critically about the [ Reporting concerns A runaway The lawyer expressed concern in relation to some of Germany's 3 million Another exiled Turk, a businesswoman identified only as 40-year-old Selina, told DPA that "mistrust is a condition that we have had to live with over the past two years." "We were spied upon, lost good old friends, and were denounced as alleged Gulen supporters," she added. Christian helpers A third asylum-seeker, identified as Canan A., a teacher, told DPA that practical assistance, such as for recognition of his academic qualification, was provided via Christian church circles. "I've been helped a lot by the Diakonie," Canan said, referring to the nationwide social welfare network run by Germany's Protestant churches. Canan said he and his wife wanted to stay and contribute their talents in Germany. Democracy in Turkey had been "shredded," its opposition intimidated and the country also faced economic ruin, Canan told DPA. |
Posted by:trailing wife |