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Immigration For Members

IN DEPTH: Are Germany’s immigration offices making international residents feel unwelcome?

Sarah Magill
Sarah Magill - news@thelocal.de
IN DEPTH: Are Germany’s immigration offices making international residents feel unwelcome?
“Welcome” in various languages on a cover sheet of work materials for German lessons for refugee children in 2015. Photo: picture alliance / dpa | Jens Büttner

Germany's coalition government wants to attract more talent from abroad by fostering a "welcoming culture" through reforms to immigration law and practices. But the Local has discovered that many people feel the country's immigration offices are anything but welcoming.

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SG
There is a gap between policy and reality. There is the intent to "attract" skilled labor at highest levels. On the flipside, the "average person" wants to shout at foreigners for not speaking German the day after they arrive - especially if they look a certain way or don't fit the stereotype of skilled labor (fair-skinned). The question is - with several options, why should any "skilled person" be willing to put up with this? A bottom-up change in attitude is needed.
Michael Richardson
I had planned to move to Germany in 2019/2022, but the pandemic postponed that, and then Brexit meant my UK citizenship meant nothing. My interactions with the consulates has been very frustrated. I'm a mature, highly-sought after IT specialist who brings my own company with me. My frustrations with very long delays, run arounds, and lack of clarity means that I probably won't move from Canada to Germany in 2023 either.
Emelia
This article refers to Ausländerbehörde but the correct name now is the Landes amt für Einwanderung (it changed a few years ago to try to be less alienating to foreigners)
Emelia
"In 2021 alone, only one percent of over 150,000 residence titles applied for were rejected" That's still 1500 applications for residence titles that were rejected in 2021. That's not an insignificant number really. People here "1%" and go "that's not much", but it really is.
Emelia
I've luckily never had my visa become problematic (touch wood), but I'm also white and from Australia, and work in tech. I've had the immigration office loose my paperwork and tell companies I don't have permission to work, when I absolutely do, only for them to magically find the paperwork weeks later.

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