Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said nationality would not play a role in Germany’s decision to host refugees fleeing from Ukraine. More than a million people have fled Ukraine into neighboring European countries.

Germany to accept refugees from Ukraine regardless of nationality

Беженцы из Украины прибывают в Берлин

Germany would take refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine no matter what their nationality, German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser told the weekly Bild am Sonntag.

“We want to save lives. That doesn’t depend on the passport,” Faeser told the German newspaper.

More than a million people from Ukraine have crossed into neighboring countries, the United Nations said Thursday. That number is expected to reach 1.5 million on Sunday.

So far, about 787, 300 people fled to Poland and around 30,000 to Germany, Polish and German authorities said.

Faeser’s statement came amid reports, including from the United Nations, that non-white people have faced racist and xenophobic treatment while trying to flee Ukraine.

What did Faeser say?

“The vast majority of those who fled are Ukrainian nationals. People from other countries who already had a permanent right of residence in Ukraine bring this status with them,” Faeser said.

She explained that people fleeing from Ukraine would not have to go through a complex asylum procedure, and said the current cooperation among European nations to ensure safety and security of Ukrainians was “historic.”

The European Union on March 3 agreed to approve temporary protection for Ukrainian refugees, while US President Joe Biden’s administration also granted temporary protection to Ukrainians living in the country.

The European Union directive does not cover students and foreign nationals, many of whom have now safely reached their country.

The condition at the border appears to have relatively eased since the first wave of refugees have fled Ukraine, DW’s Frank Hoffman reported from a border checkpoint into Poland.

Long traffic jams have eased and more people have quickly entered neighboring countries, Hoffman said.

Still, families remain separated, with people still taking shelter in shopping malls that have been turned into welcome centers in Poland, for example.

In Berlin, with state centers already up to capacity, hotel rooms and churches have been converted into shelters for those fleeing the war in Ukraine.

 

Source: dw.com