IMMIGRATION PROBLEMS AROUND THE WORLD

IMMIGRATION PROBLEMS ARE SURFACING ALL AROUND THE WORLD. THE UNEMPLOYED COMING INTO COUNTRIES IS CREATING A BURDEN ON THE POPULATIONS THAT CANNOT AFFORD TO PROVIDE FOOD, SHELTER AND CLOTHING FOR THE MASSES.

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Location: United States

ALWAYS SEEKING HONESTY AND RIGHTEOUSNESS. FAMILY PERSON AND SELF-RELIANT. I ENJOY THE FREEDOM OF OWNING MY OWN BUSINESS.

Sunday, November 06, 2005

Sun 6 Nov 2005
France burns with anger
SUSAN BELL
'WE are all against what's happening here," said one North African resident in Aulnay-sous-Bois. "There's nothing for youths to do. Sarkozy lit the fuse and has not said sorry."
For Chantal Goulot, a pensioner, the events unfolding around her home are unprecedented: "I've lived here since 1966 and never seen anything like it. They burned everything, the town hall, the Renault dealership, the car rental place, even the shop that makes cakes."

France awoke yesterday to learn it had suffered its ninth consecutive night of rioting as unrest spread beyond the capital to Nice, Lille, Marseilles and Toulouse.
French police made more than 250 arrests after nearly 900 cars were set ablaze and nurseries and a school burned overnight. Were it not for the French voices bellowing rage in the suburbs, it could have been easily mistaken for a scene from the Palestinian intifada.
But after being confronted for more than a week with violent images of burning cars, torched buildings and gangs of snarling youths armed with bricks and sticks, hurling Molotov cocktails at baton-wielding riot police, the country has finally begun to ask itself serious questions about how it has managed to breed so much anger and frustration among its immigrants communities.
The rioting began 10 days ago over the deaths of two teenagers of African origin, Bouna Traore, 15, and Zyed Benna, 17, who were electrocuted after they took refuge in an electricity sub-station in the Paris suburb of Clichy-sous-Bois. Locals maintain the pair were being pursued by police, a claim the authorities have denied.
Their deaths sparked immediate anger among locals in a town which has since been dubbed "Clichy-sous-Jungle". Judicial officials said the unrest was being organised via the internet and mobile phones.
But what has set the current unrest apart from other incidents of suburban violence and car torchings - not uncommon in France's troubled suburbs - is the way it rapidly spread as the deaths of Bouna and Zyed became national symbols of police repression, racial discrimination and everything the country's disaffected suburban youth claim is rotten in their lives.
After violence ignited across Paris, on Thursday it spread to other areas of the country for the first time since the rioting began. In the eastern city of Dijon, gangs torched cars and sporadic unrest broke out in Rouen in Normandy and the Mediterranean port of Marseilles. In the region of Seine-Saint-Denis, north of Paris, which has been at the centre of the violence, 187 cars were torched and a handicapped woman was badly burned after being doused in petrol and set ablaze in an attack on a city bus.
The riots have focused the country's attention on conditions in its troubled sink estates which are heavily populated by African Muslim immigrants and their French-born children who are trapped by poverty, crime and poor education and who face daily discrimination over jobs and housing. Unemployment among French men aged 15-24 has risen from 15% four years ago to more than 22%. It is thought to be as high as 30-40% among young second and third-generation immigrants in poorer, high-rise suburbs.
But the government's failure to control the unrest has also triggered widespread criticism of its handling of the crisis and, in particular, of President Jacques Chirac, his loyal lieutenant, Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin, and, above all, their arch rival, the fiercely ambitious interior minister, Nicolas Sarkozy.
All have been accused of trying to score political points off each other in the run-up to the campaign for the 2007 presidential elections. Chirac and de Villepin have been criticised for remaining silent for the first six and five days, respectively, of the crisis when they left Sarkozy in sole charge of the unsuccessful attempt to restore order.
Sarkozy has never been so forcefully criticised as he has been over his handling of the riots, and political observers have suggested that the silence of Chirac and de Villepin was a strategy designed to weaken the popular interior minister whom they hoped would dig his own political grave. France's crime tsar has not gone quite that far but his hardline approach has weakened him politically.
The riots began just days after Sarkozy's launch of a controversial crackdown on crime in the country's tough suburbs.
The minister's aggressive language, in which he referred to rioters as "scum" and vowed "to clean out" troubled suburbs, led to accusations from both the Socialist opposition and from within his own party that he was
fanning the violence. Police unions have also joined the chorus of criticism, castigating Sarkozy's decision to end neighbourhood policing and complaining that his declared war on delinquency is making their job increasingly difficult and dangerous.
But Sarkozy stubbornly defended himself. "I speak with real words," he told the popular daily, Le Parisien. "When you fire real bullets at police, you're not a 'youth', you're a thug."
The media-hungry Sarkozy has also been accused of trying to capitalise on the situation to boost his own visibility ahead of the presidential race.
But in the suburbs, young residents are united in their anger over the interior minister's incendiary language and his "lack of respect".
"Sarko must shut up. Either he apologises or he resigns, instead of coming to spread chaos in the suburbs like Bush in Iraq," one 16-year-old said.
"When I see what is happening now, I always come back to this image: Sarkozy in Argenteuil [a troubled Paris suburb], raising his head and saying: 'Madame, I am going to clean all of this away.' The result? By playing the superhero, the control freak, Sarko has made everyone go crazy. He showed a total lack of respect to everyone," said Christophe, 22, a student.
Franck Cannarozzo, a deputy mayor of Aulnay-sous-Bois, added: "We see among the rioters kids of 13 to 15, who are swept along, who are encouraged to take all the risks, and the others, the ringleaders, who are used to creating trouble - they terrorise everyone, and don't want to stop. Rather than playing on their PlayStations, they attack the police."
Meanwhile political analysts note that with de Villepin increasingly appealing to centre right and even left-leaning voters, Sarkozy is being forced further to the right in the run-up to the presidential campaign.
By Thursday, criticism of the government had reached such intensity that de Villepin and Sarkozy were obliged to put personal ambition behind them, at least for the cameras, and present a united front as they both postponed overseas trips to hold emergency meetings throughout the day.
Since his initial handling of the riots was criticised, de Villepin has adopted a tougher stance, blaming gangs of criminals and drug dealers for instigating the riots. He said: "The Republican state will not give in. Order and justice will have the last word in our country."
Yesterday, he summoned eight key ministers and a top Muslim official to his offices as he tried to chart an end to the violence.
But amid the internal squabbling and public posturing, one voice has cut through the rhetoric to the heart of the problem - that of social cohesion minister Jean-Louis Borloo, who pointed out that France had to acknowledge its failure to deal with the anger simmering in its impoverished suburbs for decades.
Officially, no figures are allowed in France to show how many Muslims live in the country, but the estimate is around five million - the largest Muslim population in western Europe. Many claim that widespread racism in France has made them second-class citizens there. One does not have to look far to see why they believe that.
People of North African or black African origin are almost invisible in politics and the business world in France. There are painfully few executives of ethnic origin in French boardrooms and most Arab entrepreneurs are still running corner shops rather than corporations.
Yazid Sebag, the 55-year-old chief executive of CS, a large communications group, and the sole person of North African origin to head a leading French company, says corporate France is "viscerally racist". Even on French television, with the exception of football matches and programmes imported from America, there are few black and brown faces to be seen.
And non-white minorities know that their names and the colour of their skin make it harder for them to find jobs, obtain decent housing or even enter nightclubs.
Sarkozy has vowed to rid France of "hoodlums" and "delinquents", while de Villepin has promised "an action plan for the suburbs" which he aims to present later this month.
Yesterday the authorities began to clear away the burned-out vehicles from around the tower blocks in Clichy-sous-Bois, but resentment smoulders. Groups of boys and young men still hang around outside the area's shops and cafés and treat strangers with deep suspicion, if not outright hostility. The violence over the past week has given some young men a rare sense of control - even if it is only of the streets where they live.
Many feel the state, at best, ignores them and, at worst, stands in the way of their attempts to escape. But experts and local officials believe it is going to take more than a carrot-and-stick approach to calm the simmering discontent which is growing like a cancer in the poor suburbs that ring many of France's richest cities.This article: http://www.scotsman.com/?id=2200912005 Paris riots:

Tuesday, October 11, 2005



Gangs
The danger of modern gangs is rooted in local, community-level activity. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) estimates that at least 30,000 gangs, with 800,000 members, are having an impact on 2,500 communities across the United States. Increasing law enforcement pressure and the desire to expand their lucrative illegal activities are leading gangs to spread from urban areas into suburban and rural areas. Partnerships with law enforcement, schools, parents, community and faith-based groups, and youth are an important element in addressing and reducing gang crime in the United States.
The National Alliance of Gang Investigators Association (NAGIA) conducted the 2005 National Gang Threat Assessment in conjunction with the FBI. The NAGIA surveyed 455 law enforcement agencies nationwide and identified several important trends in gang activity:
Approximately 45 percent of respondents said that gangs use technology, such as cell phones, computers, and the Internet in their criminal activities. Low-cost and accessible items, coupled with ease of use and increased technological savvy, have made it difficult for law enforcement to track and combat the illegal activity of gangs consistently.
Gangs are migrating nationwide and as they migrate they bring their culture of violence and fear to each new community. Many reasons could explain the modern migration factor such as expansion of gang territories and families moving because of jobs or incarceration.
New immigrants are susceptible to gang influences and activities because of language barriers, employment difficulties, support, protection, and fear. In Hispanic communities, membership in a gang means support and protection. In Asian communities, however, gangs tend to victimize new immigrants to scare them into silence.
As gang activity expands, traditional boundaries and alliances have been blurred. Modern hybrid gangs are less likely to use traditional symbols, colors, and markings to identify themselves. Hybrid gangs may use the name of one traditional gang, use the colors of another, and align themselves with rivals for financial gain. This haphazard organizational structure hampers law enforcement’s ability to categorize, monitor, and reduce gang activity.
Currently, there is no standardized definition for gangs, gang activities, or gang members. This makes it difficult for jurisdictions to compare and share best practices in dealing with gangs in the community. Lack of a standardized definition also makes legislation and prosecution a challenge.
Community denial hinders the ability to address and combat gang activity. Approximately 31 percent of Assessment respondents stated that their communities denied having a gang problem, had no response, or expressed no interest. Some communities do not want to recognize a gang problem because of the stigma associated with it, while other communities are silent from fear.
According to the National Drug Intelligence Center (NDIC), "street gangs, outlaw motorcycle gangs, and prison gangs are the primary distributors of illegal drugs on the streets of the United States." The FBI concurs. The 2005 National Gang Threat Assessment also estimates that 60 percent of gangs were moderately to highly involved in drug distribution at the street level. The FBI also surmises that gangs are aligning themselves with international organized crime syndicates and estimates that 26 percent of gangs are associated with organized crime. Of that group, 80 percent of the gangs are affiliated with Mexican drug organizations. These associations provide financial benefits for both groups and allow local street gangs to act as drug smugglers and dealers in the United States. The NDIC also found that gangs are increasing their smuggling activities.
There is no one solution for solving the local gang problem. However, communities can take action to address and reduce a gang problem. An important step toward gang eradication is to create a coalition of community stakeholders, including but not limited to law enforcement, local government, parents, schools, youth, businesses, and community- or faith-based groups. In Gangs: A Community Response, the Crime and Violence Prevention Center of the California Attorney General’s Office recommends that "effective anti-gang efforts begin with partnerships." The office states that "the purpose of a [community action] committee can include awareness, education, and inter-community cooperation in monitoring gang activity and in coordinating or developing intervention and prevention programs." The booklet cites several ways that communities can prevent and reduce gang activity in their neighborhoods. Some prevention methods are the following:
Conduct an assessment of the level of gang problems in schools and in the community. By compiling and sharing information, communities can customize a gang prevention and reduction plan that meets the communities’ needs, thereby resulting in a greater chance for success.
Provide safe, secure, and adequate recreational and after-school programs, especially between the hours of 2 PM and 8 PM.
Work with law enforcement to provide supervised late-night activities such as basketball games and other constructive events.
Encourage youth mentoring programs.
Provide gang education and prevention training to parents, youth, and other stakeholders.
To assist law enforcement and parents in identifying and addressing gang crime, COPS Office, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Program (OJJDP) and FBI have developed A Parent’s Quick Reference Card: Recognizing and Preventing Gang Involvement. This quick and easy reference guide provides common warning signs of gang involvement. Parents are encouraged to familiarize themselves with local gang symbols, seek help early, and consider contacting school officials, local law enforcement, faith leaders, and community organizations for additional assistance. In addition, the COPS Office has developed a CD-ROM, Solutions to Address Gang Crime, which includes over 80 government publications, and links to gang-related documents and resources.
The COPS Office has identified many resources to assist law enforcement and communities to address the issue of gangs. These resources are included in Guides and Reports, Training and Technical Assistance, and Other Resources.






Terrorist charges for jailed woman
From Al Goodman CNN Madrid Bureau Chief


Friday, September 9, 2005; Posted: 7:44 a.m. EDT (11:44 GMT)
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MADRID, Spain (CNN) -- A Spanish judge has filed preliminary charges of Islamic terrorist activity against a French woman of North African descent who already was serving time in Spanish prison for drug trafficking, a Spanish prison official told CNN.
The woman, identified only by her initials, M.H., is linked to the case of a man, Redouan Ben Fraima, arrested last March on suspicion of terrorism in an apparent failed plot to blow up a passenger ferry that crosses the Strait of Gibraltar, connecting Spain and North Africa, the official said Thursday.
Spanish authorities face several major terrorism cases -- including the Madrid train bombings last year -- and have increased surveillance in prisons, including regular sweeps of jail cells.
The effort aims in part to stymie any attempts to recruit terrorists in jail among prisoners serving time for common crimes, such as drug trafficking.
Both the woman and Ben Fraima, also of North African descent, were in Spanish jails for common crimes when authorities arrested them, separately, on the more serious charges of terrorist activity, the official said. The woman was arrested Wednesday.
The woman was born in 1981 in Paris. Last year she started serving a 3.5-year term for drug trafficking, and last Monday she was questioned in prison as a witness -- not a suspect -- in the Ben Fraima ferry-plot case, the official said.
But after "a series of contradictions" in her statements during the interrogation, the Spanish Civil Guard sent the details to the National Court, which handles terrorism cases, the Interior Ministry said Thursday in the statement that announced the woman's arrest.
On Thursday, Civil Guards and a court-appointed attorney went to the Zuera prison in northern Zaragoza province, where the woman is serving time, to inform her of the preliminary charges placing her under official investigation in the terrorism case, the prison official said.
The woman initially was arrested last year in Ceuta, a Spanish enclave on Morocco's north coast.
It was also in Ceuta where Ben Fraima was in jail for a common crime -- which the prison official could not specify -- when last March, during a routine sweep of his jail cell, authorities found documentation about the ferry that sails between Ceuta and the Spanish mainland town of Algeciras, and about a substance that could be used to make explosives.
A judge then filed preliminary charges of terrorism against him, the prison official said.
The biggest terrorism case in Spain concerns the Madrid train bombings last year that killed 191 people and wounded more than 1,500. Authorities blame Islamic terrorists. More than 100 people have been charged and indictments are expected soon, with a trial to follow.
Separately, a verdict is expected soon in the trial, which concluded last July, of 24 al Qaeda suspects, including three men charged with a planning role in the September 11 attacks.
A third major case involves more than a dozen suspects in a failed plot to attack other targets in Spain, including the National Court with a truck bomb. Some of the suspects in that case were allegedly recruited in prison.
Spanish police have arrested 50 people this year alone on suspicion of Islamic terrorist activity, the Interior Ministry said.

Monday, October 10, 2005


DALLAS, TEXAS DEMONSTRATION-FOLKS THIS IS SERIOUS! MEXICANS HAVE PLANS FOR WHITE GENOCIDE. READ THIS ARTICLE THAT I FOUND IN ANOTHER BLOG.

http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/september2005/190905nightmareracism.htm



THEO VAN GOGH WAS MURDERED BY A HOMEGROWN ISLAMIC THAT WROTE THE LETTER IN DUTCH THAT WAS PINNED TO THE VICTIM WITH A KNIFE! MR. VAN GOGH WAS WORKING ON A FILM THAT DEPICTED THE VIOLENCE AGAINST MUSLIM WOMEN BY MUSLIM MEN. THERE IS A LINK HERE THAT TALKS ABOUT THE EXPLOSIVE GROWTH OF MUSLIMS IN FRANCE AND THE NETHERLANDS. THE FRENCH ARE SCARED! WHY DOES THE UNITED STATES NOT LOOK AT WHAT IS GOING ON IN EUROPE, AND STAND FIRM AGAINST IMMIGRATION?

http://www.islamicpopulation.com/ct_article1.html









When is the last time, you saw someone holding a sign that said "Christianity will dominate the world?" Is this, Islamic invasion something that we should be worried about? You bet it is, but because of politicians that play Russian Roulette with our national security immigration of people that have hatred toward our American way of life are allowed to migrate to our country. This man is telling the plan, but is anyone paying attention?

Sunday, October 09, 2005

Bogus marriages in England:


New rules begin to bite
Vikram DoddTuesday
April 26, 2005The Guardian
There are no hard figures about the number of bogus marriages performed to allow people to circumvent immigration rules. The Home Office only started keeping statistics in 2001 about the number of weddings registrars suspected were bogus.
In 2001, 756 suspicious weddings were reported in England and Wales, rising to 1,205 the next year, 2,712 in 2003 and 3,578 last year. But only a fraction ended in convictions. Around 250,000 weddings take place a year.



Article continues




Mark Rimmer, the director of registrars in the London borough of Brent, was a critic of the previous system: "Up to 20% of all weddings in London were potentially bogus, that's between 8,000 to 10,000 a year. Immigration Service estimates were 10,000 to 15,000 a year across the UK."
Mr Rimmer is now part of an official bogus marriage taskforce - one of a number of measures to tackle the problem. Since February, people in the UK on a short-term visa, such as a tourist one, need to leave the UK and apply for a marriage entry clearance visa if they meet the love of their life. For those on student or work visas the home secretary has to give a certificate of approval to marry.
The Home Office says there has been increased enforcement by the Immigration Service plus, since March, immigration officers can refuse entry to people coming into the UK for marriage if they suspect their plans. The measures apply to people from outside the European Economic Area.
"The most blatant racketeers are a thing of the past," said Mr Rimmer.Special reportsPolicing crimeGun violence in BritainUseful linksApril 2004: Home Office figures on crime in England and Wales (pdf)British crime survey in full (pdf)Home Office












This is California in the 21st Century!

France:

Immigration France expels 13,000 illegal immigrants
Morocco TIMES
9/13/2005 1:22 pm

France Interior Minister, Nicolas Sarkozy, said that “13,000 undocumented immigrants have been expelled in eight months,” and he is now committed to sending 10,000 more illegal foreigners home before the end of 2005, reported the Moroccan daily Assabah on Tuesday.

Ph. Archives.
He urged the police authorities to work hard to meet this goal.In a meeting with police officials, Sarkozy said that “France managed to expel 12,842 by the end of August,” adding that “so far, we have succeeded in achieving 56% of the hoped-for total of 23,000,” In 2004, France expelled 18,000 foreigners.Sarkozy has refused all the attempts made by different humanitarian associations and communities, explaining that “the European Court of Human Rights does not allow people to live wherever they like,” added the Moroccan daily.“Some countries refuse to cooperate with France in this respect, namely Belarusia, Cameroon, Egypt, Georgia, Guinea, Pakistan, Serbia and Sudan,” stated the same source.“France, in return, will limit the quotas of visas given to citizens coming from these countries and wishing to go to France,” warned Sarkozy.The immigration census in France shows that some 200,000 undocumented immigrants are living in the country, coming especially from Africa, North Africa and China.

Norway Progress Party wants to combat immigration:
Progress Party brochure sparks racism chargesReactions were swift and strong after the populist Progress Party's new election campaign brochure appeared, its cover featuring a man wearing a balaclava and brandishing a shotgun alongside the quote: "The perpetrator is of foreign origin ...!"

The Fr.P brochure proclaiming that the perpetrator is of foreigner origin has been predictably controversial.PHOTO: FR.P.
Related stories:
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Anti-PM stance hasn't hurt popularity - 30.06.2005
Hagen won't back Bondevik - 20.06.2005
"For the Fr. P (Progress Party) a stricter immigration policy and a stricter crime policy is about safety. ... Safety for people to walk the streets without fear of being raped or robbed," the brochure reads, and the Fr.P argues they have facts on their side.
Olaf Thommessen, a deputy leader of the Liberal Party called the leaflet "absolutely appalling" and Nadeem Butt, the head of The Anti-Racist Center in Norway, said it was "not worthy of a Norwegian political party".
The Progress Party (Fr.P), one of Norway's most popular, is no stranger to controversy, and took a calculated risk by flirting with its more nationalistic past.
"This is a low and places the Fr.P on the outermost right-wing in European politics," Thommessen said. The prominent Liberal politician compared the brochure's content with the arguments of Le Pen and Haider and believed the approach would repel voters.
Butt particularly addressed Fr.P leader Carl I. Hagen's charge that no other Norwegian politicians were willing to take the up the issue of immigrant criminality.
"Carl I. Hagen underestimates other politicians. I have not met a single Norwegian politician who doesn't take criminality seriously, but no one overdramatizes and mixes immigration policy and crime the way Hagen and the Fr.P do," Butt said.
Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik also expressed dismay over the party literature.
"The Progress Party plays on the fear of foreigners. I expected that this would happen during the election but I think it is sad," Bondevik told newspaper Dagsavisen.
Carl I. Hagen rejected Bondevik's accusation of spreading fear.
"Bondevik is wrong here. The brochure says that very many immigrants are law-abiding citizens that do a fantastic job for Norway. But unfortunately there are all too many who are not law-abiding. Statistics show that clearly that criminality is growing among immigrants," Hagen told Dagsavisen.
The Fr.P stance is likely based on the last figures from Statistics Norway (SSB) that calculate crime rates and ethnicity from 2002. The rate of non-Western immigrants convicted of crimes then was 30 per 1000, compared to 14 Norwegians per thousand.
SSB noted that the higher percentage of young males in the immigrant population was a contributing and explanatory factor behind the high representation.
"What we are focusing on is that we have had an immigration policy with a lack of integration and a lack of demands on immigrants. Many youngsters with an immigrant background end up in a route to crime ... and we think it is important to focus on that. But if others want to put a lid on the problem and not debate it, we won't solve these problems," said Per Sandberg, Fr.P immigration policy spokesman.
Aftenposten English Web DeskJonathan Tisdall/NTB

Published: 25th July 2005 14:58 CET
HIV-positive people deported from Sweden

HIV-positive immigrants in Sweden are being sent back to their homelands, despite the fact that they will not have access to treatment when there.Swedish government policy says that people with live-threatening illnesses who cannot get treatment in their homelands should be granted Swedish residency. But according to an article in Dagens Nyheter, the Swedish Migration Board does not take a person's ability to afford treatment in their home country into account when deciding whether to deport them.Inger Lindgren, at the HIV Clinic at the Karolinska University Hospital told DN that the rules required only "that there is one tablet in the whole country...it doesn't matter whether this costs a million kronor."According to a spokeswoman for the Alien Appeals Board, the rules are based on the principle that it would be too expensive for Sweden to give treatment to all who need it.But Lars Möberg, an infectious diseases specialist at the Karolinska University Hospital, said that he did not believe that there was a great risk of "medical tourism", as most HIV positive foreigners in Sweden are diagnosed here."Testing is not widespread in Africa or Thailand," he said.Åsa Kronberg, legal adviser at the Swedish Association for HIV-positive People, told DN that Sweden has an "ethical and moral responsibility" to continue treatment that has already started.

GERMANY



First German Immigration Law Takes Effect



Foreigners already living in Germany also face changes

After much wrangling with the opposition, the German government drew up an immigration law to regulate migration last year. From Jan. 1, 2005, things have changed for foreigners.

The catalyst for Germany's first immigration law was the realization that the country's graying population and declining birth rate will one day threaten to overwhelm social security systems and disrupt the economy if young people didn't immigrate to the country.

At the same time, the new law represents a political compromise by not unrestrainedly throwing open the labor market to immigrants. In light of the country's high unemployment rate, many politicians were wary of doing that, much to the ire of German companies.

Thus, foreigners from non-EU countries will still be denied access to simple jobs. But, they can make use of special regulations -- such as temporary contracts for seasonal workers and nursing personnel -- to work in Germany. Even job-seekers from the ten countries that joined the EU in May this year will have to be patient: Only after seven years will they be permitted to look for jobs in Germany on their own.

A question of qualifications

However, highly-qualified immigrants will get a better deal, regardless of where they come from. According to the Green Card regulation initiated in 2000, foreign computer experts had to leave Germany after five years. The new law allows them to stay permanently. Foreign graduates of German universities will have a year to look for a job here if they want to stay in the country.

The new immigration regulation also welcomes self-employed immigrants -- provided they invest a minimum of €1 million ($1.4 million) and create 10 new jobs. The law also tackles a crucial deterrent to highly-qualified immigrants: bureaucracy. People who wish to work in Germany will thus receive a work and residence permit at one central place, such as the German embassy in their home country.

German for newcomers


Drawing lessons from the past, lawmakers also instilled in the regulation measures meant to improve integration in the face of widespread beliefs that a large number of the roughly 7.3 million foreigners living in Germany have not adjusted socially to their adopted country.

Starting next year, new immigrants will have the right to participate in state-funded German language classes and receive an introduction to the country's justice system, culture and history. The government has earmarked over €200 million towards that purpose.

The authorities may also force foreigners already living in Germany to participate in the courses or forfeit their residence permits or social handouts.

Such courses were previously only offered to ethnic Germans, most of whom immigrated from the former Soviet Union. The new law requires ethnic Germans as well as their family members to pass a language test before they will be allowed to move to Germany.

Changes for refugees

The law also brings small improvements for refugees by being more specific on the recognition of non-state and gender-specific persecution. Refugees from countries that cannot provide protection from persecution will have the right to asylum, including women who fear genital mutilation in their home countries.


But the law doesn't afford an overall right of residence for rejected asylum-seekers who have lived in Germany a long time. They will face deportation, despite refugee organizations' efforts.

Only a small portion of the around 20,000 rejected asylum-seekers a year will profit from the law. Those who have already lived in Germany for five years and cannot be deported for legal reasons -- if they can expect to be tortured in their home countries, for instance -- will receive a limited residence permit.

Individual German states may now decide on a case-by-case basis against deportation. Such decisions will be taken by special commissions that include representatives from the churches as well as the office for foreigners. With the exception of Bavaria, Lower Saxony and Bremen, all German states have said they will set up such commissions in 2005.

Deporting terror suspects


The law is also meant to keep suspected foreign terrorists from legally immigrating to Germany. Before an application for permanent residency is approved by the authorities, Germany's intelligence agency will carry out a background check on every case.

The immigration law will also make it easier to deport foreigners suspected of terrorist links, so-called "Islamic hate-preachers" and human traffickers.

Bernd Gräßler (sp)
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