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Oct 25, 2025

Deportations From Germany Rise Nearly 20 % — Turkey and Georgia Top Destination List

Deportations From Germany Rise Nearly 20 % — Turkey and Georgia Top Destination List
Federal Police statistics released on 25 October show that Germany deported 17,651 people between January and September 2025—an increase of almost 20 percent compared with the same period last year. Turkey (1,614 removals) and Georgia (1,379) were the main recipient countries, followed by Afghanistan, Serbia and North Macedonia.

The Interior Ministry attributes the uptick to a package of enforcement measures adopted in March that broadened detention powers and accelerated charter flights for cases involving criminal convictions or repeated identity refusals. Critics argue that the government is bowing to political pressure from conservative parties ahead of the February 2026 federal election.

The business-mobility angle is twofold. First, companies employing third-country nationals on short-term assignments must ensure visa and residence documentation is airtight; spot checks at worksites have increased by 35 percent this year. Second, rising removal numbers may complicate intra-EU postings for Turkish and Georgian subcontractors: workers previously expelled from Germany face automatic Schengen-wide entry bans of at least one year.

Civil-society groups staged evening protests outside the Reichstag, accusing opposition leader Friedrich Merz of fanning anti-immigrant sentiment. They point out that almost one-fifth of deportees—3,095 individuals—were minors. The Interior Ministry counters that family removals involve extensive child-welfare assessments and that 84 percent of deportations were “voluntary returns” supported by IOM counselling.

For global mobility managers the message is clear: expect stricter scrutiny of extension applications for tolerated stay (Duldung) permits and budget for longer lead-times on Blue Card conversions, particularly for Turkish IT contractors.
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