
German government restricts migrant family reunification, path to citizenship
BERLIN, May 28 (Reuters) - Germany's government approved measures to restrict family reunification for migrants and delay citizenship access on Wednesday, forging ahead with a major shift in migration policy under conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz.
The cabinet agreed to a two-year suspension of the right for migrants who do not qualify for full refugee status, so called "subsidiary protection" holders, to bring their children and spouses to Germany.
Around 380,000 people, mainly Syrians, hold this status.
Subsidiary protection previously allowed 12,000 family members to join their relatives in Germany annually.
According to the draft law, this temporary suspension aims "to relieve pressure on Germany's reception and integration systems" and provides an "appropriate means for quickly relieving burden on municipalities".
The government also eliminated the "fast-track" naturalization option after three years of residency, extending the minimum waiting period for citizenship to five years.
This decision overturns a regulation introduced six months ago by the three-party coalition under Social Democrat Olaf Scholz.
Last year, Germany saw around 200,000 naturalizations, the highest in 25 years. The criteria for applicants typically include financial independence, stable employment and strong language skills.
The legislative proposals will be fast-tracked through parliament via the governing coalition of conservatives and Social Democrats, bypassing the need for referral to the upper house of parliament, the Bundesrat.
Hashtags

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


Reuters
4 minutes ago
- Reuters
Pakistan to upgrade diplomatic ties with Afghanistan in easing of tensions
ISLAMABAD, May 30 (Reuters) - Pakistan will designate an ambassador to Afghanistan, the first since Kabul fell to the Taliban in 2021, the country's foreign minister said on Friday, announcing an upgrade in diplomatic ties that shows some easing of tensions between the two neighbours. Currently, Pakistan and Afghanistan's top envoy in each other's country is a charge d'affaires, a lower level than ambassador. Pakistan has not yet said who will be nominated to the upgraded post. Announcing the decision to upgrade diplomatic representation, Pakistan's foreign minister, Ishaq Dar, said bilateral relations had been on a positive trajectory since he visited Kabul with a Pakistani delegation last month. "I am confident this step would further contribute towards enhanced engagement," he said on X. Afghanistan's foreign ministry and Taliban's charge d'affaires in Islamabad did not immediately respond to a request for comment. China, which hosted an informal meeting last week between the Pakistani government and the Afghan Taliban administration, said afterward that the two countries planned to upgrade their diplomatic ties. Pakistan and Afghanistan have had a strained relationship since the Taliban administration took power after the withdrawal of U.S.-led NATO forces. Islamabad says that Islamist militants who launch attacks inside Pakistan use Afghan soil. Kabul denies this, saying such militancy is Pakistan's domestic problem to handle. No country has formally recognised the Taliban administration since it took power, with foreign powers calling for it to change course on women's rights. Pakistan becomes the fourth country after China, UAE and Uzbekistan to designate an ambassador to Kabul. Although those governments say they have not formally recognised the Taliban's government, diplomats and experts say that having an ambassador officially present their credentials represents a step towards recognition.


Reuters
4 minutes ago
- Reuters
Global crises disrupt effort to get millions to quit smoking, report says
LONDON, May 30 (Reuters) - The COVID-19 pandemic, climate change and wars have combined to hamper global governments' plans to reduce tobacco use, derailing efforts to get an estimated 95 million people to stop smoking, a report endorsed by 57 campaign groups said on Friday. Governments had planned to reduce smoking rates among people over 15 by 30% between 2010 and 2025 as part of an action plan tied to global sustainable development targets agreed in 2015. But the timeline to achieve the goal was extended an extra five years in 2024 as other priorities pushed countries to divert resources away from implementing a World Health Organization treaty on tobacco control signed by 168 countries. "This ... delay represents an estimated 95 million additional tobacco users, who would otherwise have quit by 2025," said the report, submitted to the U.N. Economic and Social Council, which oversees global sustainable development. While governments have succeeded in reducing the number of smokers, the failure to hit the 30% reduction target means that 1,207,800,000 people are still smoking globally, instead of the target of 1,112,400,000, based on a Reuters calculation using smoking rates and population figures provided in the report. Published by Action on Smoking and Health Canada and endorsed by the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids, Cancer Research UK and others, the report warned the delays could result in millions of additional deaths from tobacco use if sustained. The U.N. has already acknowledged that funding shortfalls, geopolitical tensions and pandemic-linked disruptions have pushed the world off track on most of the 17 wide-ranging sustainable development goals. Those goals aim, among other things, to reduce poverty and hunger and increase access to healthcare and education. The groups that endorsed ASH Canada's report urged governments to redouble their efforts on tobacco control policies such as tax increases and smoking bans.


Reuters
7 minutes ago
- Reuters
Brazil tightens prudential rules, adds individual liquidity requirements for banks
BRASILIA, May 30 (Reuters) - Brazil's National Monetary Council (CMN) tightened prudential rules on risk management, liquidity and capital for financial institutions, introducing individual requirements to complement existing rules for conglomerates. According to a central bank statement on Friday, the changes approved by the country's top economic policy body strengthen the stability of the financial system and align with the international Basel III regulatory framework as well as recommendations from the IMF and World Bank. The government will introduce a liquidity requirement taking effect in July 2026 for standalone financial institutions, aligning with the methodology already used for financial conglomerates. The rule will apply to institutions that are part of conglomerates classified under "Segment 1," which includes large and systemically important entities subject to stricter regulatory standards. Further changes to integrated risk management, effective in September, will seek to ensure timely liquidity transfers among institutions within the same conglomerate, the central bank said. Meanwhile, the leverage ratio calculation has been updated and expanded to cover all institutions except those with a low-risk profile. Its implementation will be phased in between July 2026 and January 2028. According to the central bank, the new requirement will apply on both consolidated and individual bases, including to payment institutions that lead large conglomerates integrated by financial institutions.