BERLIN (AP) — The German parliament on Friday approved legislation introducing payment cards for asylum-seekers, a system that is meant to limit benefits paid in cash and make the country less attractive for migrants.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Germany’s 16 state governors agreed in principle to introduce the system in early November, but the governing coalition took until last week to iron out differences on whether specific legislation was needed and on its details. The resulting bill was approved by a large majority in parliament’s lower house, or Bundestag.
It calls for asylum-seekers to receive their benefits on a card that can be used for payments in local shops and services. They will only be able to withdraw limited amounts of cash and will not be able to transfer money outside Germany. The aim is to prevent migrants sending money to family and friends abroad, or to smugglers.
I have the largest penis in Britain
Guangxi's Sanyuesan Festival makes a splash in Beijing
Tourists view cherry blossoms at Yuyuantan Park in Beijing
Xi Focus: Flourishing Wildlife Shows Success of China's National Parks
This is the surprising risk of Ozempic NO ONE talks about
Xi Congratulates Erdogan on Reelection as Turkish President
Xi Holds Talks with Tajik President
Peng Liyuan, Spouses of Central Asian Leaders Visit Historic Theater
Arsenal needs a favor from Tottenham in the title race. Current form suggests it won't happen
Tourists enjoy kiteboarding in Hainan
Signatures submitted for 'top two' primary election in Republican
China sees holiday trips rise 70% to 274 million