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Germany sees sharp drop in asylum applications in August

Germany sees sharp drop in asylum applications in August
Asylum applications in Germany fell by almost 60 percent in August compared with the same month last year as the government pursued a crackdown on migration, interior ministry figures showed on Tuesday. (AP/File)
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Updated 02 September 2025

Germany sees sharp drop in asylum applications in August

Germany sees sharp drop in asylum applications in August
  • A total of 7,803 people applied for asylum for the first time in August, compared with 18,427 last year
  • The drop comes as Germany pursues various measures to curb migration

BERLIN: Asylum applications in Germany fell by almost 60 percent in August compared with the same month last year as the government pursued a crackdown on migration, interior ministry figures showed on Tuesday.
A total of 7,803 people applied for asylum for the first time in August, compared with 18,427 last year, the ministry said, confirming figures first published by the Bild daily.
The drop comes as Germany pursues various measures to curb migration under Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who took office in May.
Under Merz, Germany has imposed strict border controls and deported criminals to Afghanistan.
The government has restricted family reunifications for some migrants and plans to toughen the rules for obtaining German citizenship.
Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt said the figures were evidence that “our asylum policy change is working, our measures are successful.”
From now on, he said, the political focus would be on “tightening up the common European asylum system in order to further reduce the pressure of migration on Europe.”
The new figures continue a trend that could already be seen in previous months of 2025.
In July, Germany registered 8,293 asylum applications, compared with 18,503 in the same month last year.
A total of 70,011 applications were filed in the first seven months of the year, compared with 140,783 during the same period in 2024, according to the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF).


Lawyers for 5 men deported to an African prison accuse Trump’s program of denying them due process

Updated 3 min 28 sec ago

Lawyers for 5 men deported to an African prison accuse Trump’s program of denying them due process

Lawyers for 5 men deported to an African prison accuse Trump’s program of denying them due process
They accused the Trump administration’s third-country deportation program of denying their clients due process
The New York-based Legal Aid Society said that it was representing one of the men, Jamaican national Orville Etoria

CAPE TOWN: Five men deported by the United States to Eswatini in July have been held in a maximum-security prison in the African nation for seven weeks without charge or explanation and with no access to legal counsel, their lawyers said Tuesday.
They accused the Trump administration’s third-country deportation program of denying their clients due process.
The New York-based Legal Aid Society said that it was representing one of the men, Jamaican national Orville Etoria, and that he had been “inexplicably and illegally” sent to Eswatini when his home country was willing to accept him back.
That contradicted the US Department of Homeland Security, which said when it deported the five men with criminal records that they were being sent to Eswatini because their home countries refused to take them. Jamaica’s foreign minister has also said that the Caribbean country didn’t refuse to take back deportees.
Etoria was the first of at least 20 deportees sent by the US to various African nations in the last two months to be identified publicly.
Expanding deportation program
The deportations are part of the Trump administration’s expanding third-country program to send migrants to countries in Africa that they have no ties with to get them off US soil.
Since July, the US has deported migrants to South Sudan, Eswatini and Rwanda, while a fourth African nation, Uganda, says it has agreed to a deal in principle with the US to accept deportees.
Washington has said it wants to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia, whose case has been a flashpoint over US President Donald Trump’s hard-line immigration policies, to Uganda after he was wrongly deported to his native El Salvador in March.
Etoria served a 25-year prison sentence and was granted parole in 2021, the Legal Aid Society said, but was now being held in Eswatini’s main maximum-security prison for an undetermined period of time despite completing that sentence.
The US Homeland Security Department said that he was convicted of murder. The agency posted on X in reference to a New York Times report on Estoria, saying that it “will continue enforcing the law at full speed — without apology.”
It didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press.
The Legal Aid Society said that an Eswatini lawyer acting on behalf of all five men being held in prison there has been repeatedly denied access to them by prison officials since they arrived in the tiny southern African nation bordering South Africa in mid-July.
The other four men are citizens of Cuba, Laos, Vietnam and Yemen.
‘Indefinite detention’
A separate lawyer representing the two men from Laos and Vietnam said that his clients also served their criminal sentences in the US and had “been released into the community.”
“Then, without warning and explanation from either the US or Eswatini governments, they were arbitrarily arrested and sent to a country to which they have never ever been,” the lawyer, Tin Thanh Nguyen, said in a statement. “They are now being punished indefinitely for a sentence they already served.”
He said that the US government was “orchestrating secretive third-country transfers with no meaningful legal process, resulting in indefinite detention.”
US Homeland Security said those two men had been convicted of charges including child rape and second-degree murder.
A third lawyer, Alma David, said that she represented the two men from Yemen and Cuba who are also being held in the same prison and denied access to lawyers. She said she had been told by the head of the Eswatini prison that only the US Embassy could grant access to the men.
“Since when does the US Embassy have jurisdiction over Eswatini’s national prisons?” she said in a statement, adding the men weren’t told a reason for their detention, and “no lawyer has been permitted to visit them.” David said all five were being held at US taxpayers’ expense.
Secretive deals
The deportation deals the US has struck in Africa have been largely secretive, and with countries with questionable rights records.
Authorities in South Sudan have given little information on where eight men sent there in early July are being held or what their fate might be. They were also described by US authorities as dangerous criminals from South Sudan, Cuba, Laos, Mexico, Myanmar and Vietnam.
The five men in Eswatini are being held at the Matsapha Correctional Complex. It’s the same prison where Eswatini, which is ruled by a king as Africa’s last absolute monarchy, has imprisoned pro-democracy campaigners amid reports of abuse that includes beatings and the denial of food to inmates.
Eswatini authorities said when the five men arrived that they were being held in solitary confinement.
Another seven migrants were deported by the US to Rwanda in mid-August, Rwandan authorities said. They didn’t say where they are being held or give any information on their identities.
The deportations to Rwanda were kept secret at the time and only announced last week.

France issues arrest warrant for Assad over 2012 killings of journalists

France issues arrest warrant for Assad over 2012 killings of journalists
Updated 50 min 44 sec ago

France issues arrest warrant for Assad over 2012 killings of journalists

France issues arrest warrant for Assad over 2012 killings of journalists
  • The journalists had clandestinely entered the besieged city to ‘document the crimes committed by Bashar Assad’s regime’ and were victims of a ‘targeted bombing’

PARIS: French judicial authorities have issued arrest warrants for ousted Syrian President Bashar Assad and six other top former officials over the bombardment of a rebel-held city in 2012 that killed two journalists, lawyers said on Tuesday.

Marie Colvin, 56, an American working for The Sunday Times of Britain, and French photographer Remi Ochlik, 28, were killed on Feb. 22, 2012 by the explosion in the eastern city of Homs, which is being investigated by the French judiciary as a potential crime against humanity as well as a war crime.
British photographer Paul Conroy, French reporter Edith Bouvier and Syrian translator Wael Omar were wounded in the attack on the informal press center where they had been working.
Assad escaped with his family to Russia after being ousted at the end of 2024, although his precise whereabouts have not been confirmed. 
Other than Assad, the warrants notably target his brother Maher Assad, who was the de facto head of the 4th Syrian armored division at the time, intelligence chief Ali Mamlouk, and then-army chief of staff Ali Ayoub.
“The issuing of the seven arrest warrants is a decisive step that paves the way for a trial in France for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by Bashar Assad’s regime,” said Clemence Bectarte, lawyer for the Paris-based International Federation for Human Rights and Ochlik’s parents.
The FIDH said the journalists had clandestinely entered the besieged city to “document the crimes committed by Bashar Assad’s regime” and were victims of a “targeted bombing.”
“The investigation clearly established that the attack on the informal press center was part of the Syrian regime’s explicit intention to target foreign journalists in order to limit media coverage of its crimes and force them to leave the city and the country,” said Mazen Darwish, lawyer and director of the Syrian Center for Media and Freedom of Expression.
Colvin was known for her fearless reporting and signature black eye patch, which she wore after losing sight in one eye in an explosion during Sri Lanka’s civil war. 

 


Fires force evacuations in Canada’s far north

Fires force evacuations in Canada’s far north
Updated 47 min 57 sec ago

Fires force evacuations in Canada’s far north

Fires force evacuations in Canada’s far north
  • Fires are now threatening the towns of Fort Providence and Whati in the Northwest Territories
  • Thousands of forest fires have raged across Canada since the spring

MONTREAL: More than 1,000 residents of Canada’s vast and remote far north are under evacuation orders as forest fires rage in the drought-struck region.
Canada is undergoing its second worst fire season in recent memory, with 8.3 million hectares (20.5 million acres) of forest — an area the size of Austria — scorched thus far.
Fires are now threatening the towns of Fort Providence and Whati in the Northwest Territories, prompting the first evacuations this year in the enormous area, where some land and large islands straddle the Arctic Circle.
Fire seasons have been longer than usual since 2022, said Mike Westwick, manager of wildfire prevention and mitigation for the territory.
“It’s stressful, mentally on people, it’s stressful, physically on workers and people who may need to move locations and be away from home,” he told AFP.
Thousands of forest fires have raged across Canada since the spring. More than 650 blazes are currently active, and over 100 of those are uncontrolled, according to official data released Tuesday.
Canada has increasingly been hit with extreme weather events, with scientists observing that northern regions are warming at a faster pace than other parts of the globe.
2023 remains the worst fire year on record for Canada, when nearly 18 million hectares (44.5 million acres) went up in smoke.


Ukraine’s Zelensky: Russia is engaged in a new troop buildup in certain sectors

Ukraine’s Zelensky: Russia is engaged in a new troop buildup in certain sectors
Updated 56 min 18 sec ago

Ukraine’s Zelensky: Russia is engaged in a new troop buildup in certain sectors

Ukraine’s Zelensky: Russia is engaged in a new troop buildup in certain sectors
  • “He (Putin) refuses to be forced into peace,” Zelensky said in his nightly video address, referring to Kremlin leader Vladimir Putin.

KYIV: President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Tuesday that Russia was engaged in a new troop buildup in certain sectors of the front line and was still launching strikes on Ukrainian targets.
“Now we see another buildup of Russian forces in certain sectors of the front. He refuses to be forced into peace,” Zelensky said in his nightly video address, referring to Kremlin leader Vladimir Putin.
Zelensky provided no further details, but said “Russia continues to launch strikes. Of course, we will respond to this.”


French police kill suspect after 5 hurt in Marseille knife attack

French police kill suspect after 5 hurt in Marseille knife attack
Updated 37 min 46 sec ago

French police kill suspect after 5 hurt in Marseille knife attack

French police kill suspect after 5 hurt in Marseille knife attack
  • The assailant, a Tunisian national with legal status in France, stabbed several people at a hotel that had just evicted him for non-payment
  • The victims’ conditions were not immediately known

MARSEILLE: French police on Tuesday killed a man suspected of stabbing five people in the southern port city of Marseille, one of whom is in critical condition, a public prosecutor said.
The assailant, a Tunisian national with legal status in France, stabbed several people at a hotel that had just evicted him for non-payment, then attacked several others on a busy shopping street, prosecutor Nicolas Bessone told reporters.
“It would appear that he blindly and gratuitously attempted to strike people,” Bessone said.
The man first stabbed his roommate, leaving the victim in critical condition, the prosecutor said.
He then attacked the hotel’s manager, who fled into the street along with his son, who was stabbed “in the back.”
While both father and son were seriously hurt, but “their lives are not believed to be in danger,” Bessone said.
The man then continued what prosecutors called a “criminal rampage” on a crowded street, injuring at least two people in the face with a baton he carried along with two knives.
Witnesses said he shouted “religious and incoherent things,” a judicial source said, adding that there were no grounds for France’s anti-terror unit PNAT to get involved in the case.
A police patrol armed with tasers and automatic weapons in the area intervened and ordered him to drop his weapons, but when he refused they “neutralized” him, the prosecutor said.
A video published on TikTok by an anonymous user appears to show the man facing four plainclothes police for around 20 seconds before rushing toward them. They then opened fire. Seven shots can be heard on the video.
A resident told AFP that police arrived “very quickly” at the scene, and that the man had tried to attack them with a knife. One policeman shouted “stop, stop,” the witness said.
Another eyewitness told AFP the man was holding “two large butcher knives.”
The man died despite efforts to resuscitate him.
Prosecutors have opened an investigation into attempted murder and attempted murder of police officer.
Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau is to travel to Marseille on Tuesday evening, with a visit to the city’s police headquarters planned, his office said.
Police cordoned off the area, close to Marseille’s port, and put up a forensic tent in front of a fast-food restaurant.
The area is the site of several drug dealing spots, notorious for street consumption of cocaine as well as drug-related crime.