Migrants told Germany cannot provide ‘infinite refuge’

German president Joachim Gauck says refugee crisis is EU’s ‘biggest ever test’

Germany's president Joachim Gauck has warned that the refugee crisis presents the European Union with its "biggest ever test" as he warned that limits would be introduced on refugees arriving in Germany.

In a keynote speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Mr Gauck said that while Germany would continue its obligation to offer refuge to those in need, "solidarity is not infinite".

“Forms of control and limitations will be introduced, whatever form they take. They will have to be introduced,” he said, warning that politicians needed to bring citizens with them on the refugee issue.

Migration was politically viable only to the extent that citizens were willing to accept it, he said. “People must believe that politicians have the ability to think forward and that the citizens are prepared to go along with and accept the change.”

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Nonetheless he defended Germany's response to the refugee crisis in the summer and autumn of 2015, noting that for older German people in particular, it was important "to show solidarity, to show that we would never again become xenophobic or racist".

The obligation to offer refuge to those in need was not only inscribed in the Geneva Conventions, it was also provided for in the German constitution, he said. Referencing the work of economist John Kenneth Galbraith, he highlighted the economic benefit of migration to the receiving country.

Mr Gauck’s intervention on the refugee issue comes as political debate in Germany intensifies over Angela Merkel’s handling of the issue. The German chancellor cancelled her regular visit to the World Economic Forum earlier this month, due to domestic political concerns.

The German president said that, while migration was not a new phenomenon, almost 60 million people were currently fleeing their homelands, many at great danger to their own lives. “The hundreds of thousands arriving are presenting the European Union with its biggest ever test,” he said.

In an implicit reference to the New Year's Eve sexual assaults in Cologne, he said "not all migrants have espoused all the fundamental European beliefs" , including the perspective on the role of women in society, noting that "migration and integration must be thought of in tandem".

Mr Gauck also urged the European Union to preserve the integrity of the Schengen code and not to “retreat into national solutions” to the refugee crisis.

"The freedom of movement within Schengen can only be preserved if security is guaranteed at the external borders. Conversely ... if the external borders are not effectively protected, national borders will once again become important and freedom of movement within Europe will be at risk."

He noted that a growing number of people in Germany were not ruling out the reintroduction of national border checks as a solution to the crisis.

“A good solution would not be the loss of this freedom of movement. Can we not come up with a better idea than this?”

Suzanne Lynch

Suzanne Lynch

Suzanne Lynch, a former Irish Times journalist, was Washington correspondent and, before that, Europe correspondent