Latest news with #AlexanderSchweitzer


Qatar Tribune
19 hours ago
- Politics
- Qatar Tribune
Border checks need ongoing justification: German state PM
BerlincTypeface:> The German government must be able to justify continued border controls in the Schengen area, the premier of the western German state of Rhineland-Palatinate, which shares borders with Belgium, Luxembourg and France, said on Saturday. 'They are not agreed as a permanent measure, they are not designed to be permanent,' Alexander Schweitzer said of the recently imposed border checks. Schweitzer was speaking on the sidelines of a ceremony marking the 40th anniversary of the Schengen Agreement in Schengen, Luxembourg. With the 1985 agreement, Germany, France, Luxembourg, Belgium and the Netherlands agreed to gradually dismantle border controls between them, allowing free movement within the Schengen area. (DPA)


DW
a day ago
- Politics
- DW
Germany updates: German Foreign Minister visits Saudi Arabia – DW – 06/14/2025
06/14/2025 June 14, 2025 Germany's Merz praises border-free Europe The German Police Union says the border checks and asylum rejections are not sustainable Image: Angelika Warmuth/REUTERS German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Saturday praised the Schengen Agreement, which led to internal borders among most European Union member states being removed to allow free movement within the bloc. Saturday marks 40 years since the agreement was signed. "The Schengen Agreement is unique, the foundation of our free Europe. It should stay that way: We want a strong European internal market without restrictions," Merz said on X. "This requires secure external borders, implementation of the new migration rules, and effective cooperation," he added. The chancellor, who took office last month, has sought to clamp down on irregular migration to Germany amid rising anti-immigrant sentiment in his country and a far-right movement that has been gaining strength in recent years. Germany has reinstated police controls on roads and railways along many of its borders. At a ceremony marking the 40th anniversary of the Schengen Agreement in Schengen, Luxembourg, the premier of the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate, Alexander Schweitzer, said the federal government's recently imposed border checks must not become permanent. "They are not agreed as a permanent measure, they are not designed to be permanent," Alexander Schweitzer said of the border checks. The Schengen Agreement was signed in 1985 by Germany, France, Luxembourg, Belgium and the Netherlands. Today, some 29 countries with around 420 million inhabitants belong to the border and customs-free zone. "Schengen is a historic achievement of today's Europe," Schweitzer said. "We must not throw Europe and what we have achieved in Europe out like a baby with the bath water," he added, while emphasizing that he was not opposed to "local, temporary, well-justified border controls."