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German justice minister condemns attacks on judges after asylum ruling

German justice minister condemns attacks on judges after asylum ruling

Arab News11 hours ago

BERLIN: German Justice Minister Stefanie Hubig has condemned 'alarming' attacks on judges who earlier this week delivered a ruling challenging a key plank of the government's immigration crackdown.
Hubig said in a statement together with the justice ministers of Germany's federal states that 'we condemn such attacks on the judicial system and on judges' independence.'
The Berlin judges' association said on Wednesday that two of its members had been 'defamed and threatened' after handing down their decision on Monday.
In that ruling, the judges found that the pushback of three Somali asylum seekers to Poland on May 9 had been illegal.
Hubig, from the Social Democrat party, said in the joint statement that attacks on judges' independence 'strike at the basic values of our constitution.'
'It is a key duty of free courts to determine whether the law is being respected,' the statement read.
Straight after entering office early last month, the government under conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz introduced a policy of refusing undocumented migrants — including almost all asylum seekers — entry at Germany's borders.
The court said that the three Somalis should not have been sent back to Poland before it had been determined which state was responsible for processing their claim under the EU's so-called 'Dublin' system.
Nevertheless, Merz said that the government would continue the policy, a central part of his promised crackdown on immigration.
He and Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt, both from the conservative CDU/CSU alliance, point to the fact that the judgment technically only applied to the three
Somalis and said the government can successfully defend the policy in any further court action.
Merz insists that a tougher immigration policy is essential to halt the growth of the far-right Alternative for Germany, which achieved a record score of over 20 percent in February's general election.
However, some in the center-left SPD, the junior partner in Merz's coalition, have expressed unease at the pushbacks and doubts over their legality.

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