
Germany granted citizenship to a record number of people in 2024, led by Syrians
BERLIN, June 10 (Reuters) - Germany granted citizenship to a record 291,955 people last year, a 46% increase from 2023, with Syrians making up the largest group, according to data released by the Federal Statistics Office on Tuesday.
Reforms in the citizenship law contributed to the jump, the office said. Last June Germany reduced its residency requirement for naturalization from eight years to five and even three in special cases.
Many Syrians who arrived as refugees during 2015 and 2016 when former Chancellor Angela Merkel opened Germany's borders to hundreds of thousands fleeing war and persecution in the Middle East became eligible for naturalization during 2024.
As a result, they made up the largest group of new citizens, accounting for 28% of all naturalisations, or 83,150 people, a 10.1% increase. They were followed by Turks, Iraqis, Russians, and Afghans, who represented 8%, 5%, 4%, and 3% of the total, respectively.
Russians saw the largest percentage increase in naturalisations, with the number rising to 12,980 in 2024 from 1,995 the previous year. The number of Turks taking German citizenship more than doubled to 22,525.
The new citizenship law also allows individuals to retain their original citizenship while acquiring German nationality, enabling tens of thousands of Turkish citizens — many of whom, or whose ancestors, came to Germany as guest workers in the 1960s and 1970s — to become naturalized.
However, Germany's new coalition government of the conservatives and Social Democrats plans to roll back some of these measures and reinstate a minimum waiting period of five years for citizenship.
The conservatives have said citizenship should come at the end of a period of integration, not "jump-start" it, and fear shorter wait times to become a German citizen may drive increased migration and public resentment.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Defendants should be allowed to ask for jury-free trials to reduce court backlogs, top judge says
Defendants should be allowed to ask for a jury-free trial to reduce court backlogs, a top judge has said. Sir Brian Leveson, who is heading up a review set up by the government, is to propose a 'once in a generation' reform to tackle record court backlogs that would see the UK follow the likes of Canada, Australia and New Zealand. He is to make the recommendation to tackle delays in the legal system, which has a current backlog of 75,000 cases, forcing victims to wait four to five years for justice in many cases. Sir Brian told a conference: 'I can see the advantage in lots of cases. You will get a reasoned judgment [from a judge]. In front of a jury, you don't get a judgment at all, you get guilty or not guilty. 'The case will be undeniably speedier because the judge doesn't have to explain to the jury all the basic premises of the criminal law.' Other reforms could include sparing the public from sitting as jurors in any case scheduled to last more than 12 months due to the disruption to their lives and careers, the Telegraph reports. This could also apply to factually or legally complex cases, where jurors may struggle to understand the full details. The right to a jury trial could also be restricted for lower level offences including assaulting a police officer while resisting arrest, dangerous driving and possession of drugs. Instead, these crimes could be tried by a court comprising of a judge and two magistrates or by extending magistrates' powers to sentence offenders to up to two years in prison, double their current limit. This would mean more cases could be dealt with at a magistrates' court, freeing up more space in the crown courts for more serious offences. Speaking at the conference, Sir Brian warned that the backlog of cases could reach 100,000 if no radical action is taken. He added he believes judges should have the right to overrule a defendant's request for a judge only trial if it is in the public interest. 'There are some cases, which I would not consider appropriate for a judge to try alone, and I would give the judge a discretion,' Sir Brian said. 'So a defendant may say, 'I would like to be tried by a judge alone', and the judge would be perfectly entitled to say, 'I think not'.' Sir Brian is due to deliver his report next week to Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood, with publication expected next month.


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
EU's nuclear energy plans require 241 billion euro investment, draft shows
BRUSSELS, June 13 (Reuters) - European Union countries' plans to expand nuclear energy will require 241 billion euros ($278 billion) in investments, and new funding instruments to make these huge costs less risky for private investors, the European Commission said on Friday. EU countries have set out plans to expand their nuclear power capacity to 109 gigawatts by 2050, up from 98 GW today, the Commission said in a draft analysis of investment needs for the sector, due to be published on Friday. Those plans would require investments of 205 billion euros in new nuclear power plants, plus 36 billion euros to extend the lifespan of existing reactors, including both public and private money, the draft said. Nuclear power generated around 24% of the EU's electricity last year. With recent nuclear projects in Europe running over budget and facing long delays, the Commission said more financial instruments were needed to attract private investors put off by these risks and huge upfront costs. A five-year delay to planned new projects would add an extra 45 billion euros to the estimated cost of them by 2050, it said. "A combination of diverse sources of financing complemented by de-risking instruments may be the response," the Commission said. The draft document was first reported by Bloomberg News. EU countries have long disagreed over whether to promote nuclear power to achieve CO2 emissions targets. At the centre of the debate are France, which relies on nuclear power as its top electricity source, and Germany, which under previous governments opposed it. As a result, EU energy policies have typically not singled out nuclear with incentives or targets, and the EU budget does not support the building of new nuclear power plants. The draft document said the Commission and the European Investment Bank will launch a 500-million-euro pilot programme of power purchase agreements, for which nuclear projects will be eligible. Twelve of the EU's 27 member countries currently have nuclear reactors, with France holding by far the biggest fleet. Slovakia and Hungary have new reactors under construction, while countries including Poland hope to build their first plants. ($1 = 0.8666 euros)


Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Telegraph
Nato drafts one-page communiqué to suit Trump's attention span
Donald Trump will be handed a one-page communiqué to sign off at a Nato leaders' summit, in an effort to avoid sparking a row between Europe and the US president, The Telegraph can disclose. The simplified statement will likely only contain around five or six paragraphs, detailing how the Western military alliance will meet Mr Trump's demand to increase defence spending to 5 per cent of GDP. The summit in The Hague will also be modelled on a similar leaders gathering in London in 2019, which was deliberately kept short because of the president's attention span. The one-page communiqué will be almost entirely focused on the historic decision to more than double spending on defence by leaders to meet new capability targets for deterring a Russian invasion. The Telegraph understands the document will brand Russia as a 'threat' to Nato, as well as offer a nod to the alliance's support for war-torn Ukraine. But it will strip out any mention of Kyiv's 'irreversible' path to membership, and remove any mention of climate change posing a 'defining challenge' to member states. Also, there will unlikely be any language accusing China of being a ' decisive enabler ' of Russia's war against Ukraine. One alliance source said it would be 'focused on the core issues at hand'. It will be a stark contrast to previous statements issued by Nato leaders after their set-piece annual summit. At the 2023 summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, the declaration contained 90 paragraphs. A year later, in Washington, leaders signed off on 44 lines of text, including statements on climate change, Ukraine, Russia, terrorism and the defence industry. A senior Nato diplomat said: 'We're going to go even shorter this time. A single sheet of paper and it should be five paragraphs long.' The conciseness of the statement is purely designed to prevent rows from breaking out between Mr Trump and his counterparts in Canada and Europe. European leaders have been barred from bringing up the issue of trade tariffs, in a further bid to maintain harmony with the president. The White House chief is known for preferring short, sharp briefings, with his aides deliberately keeping their memos to a single page of A4. Crackdown on leaking A Nato source said the drafting process for the annual communiqué of Nato countries had been changed this year by Mark Rutte, the alliance's secretary-general, to make it more secure. Usually, the document leaks to the media in the final hours of negotiations between member states as the various commitments are agreed by deputy ambassadors and their staff. But sources close to Nato HQ said Mr Rutte had restricted the distribution list of the communiqué only to ambassadors, in an attempt to prevent it from leaking. The secretary-general has also cracked down on the 'Christmas tree' approach taken by member states in previous years, when national governments attach their own priorities to the communiqué. One example given was Spain's insistence at previous summits that the Mediterranean was listed as a key strategic region for Nato. The Dutch organisers of The Hague summit will also roll out the red carpet for the US president in the hope it keeps him sweet. There will be a working session solely on defence spending, with leaders huddled around the table. Mr Trump, a fan of royals, will also be given the opportunity to meet King Willem-Alexander at a dinner hosted by the Dutch monarch the night before the summit. Interactions between the US president and Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president, will also be limited, because of the risk of a public bust-up. A meeting of the Nato-Ukraine Council, the official body established in Washington, will be held by foreign ministers. There also won't be any meetings of the Ukraine Defence Contact Group, which coordinates Western military aid to Kyiv, or the ' coalition of the willing ', the Anglo-French initiative to police any ceasefire.