Germany has taken a sharp turn in its migration policy compared to the 'welcoming measures' associated with the 'Merkel era'. Euronews reporter Monica Pinna went to Berlin to discover what has changed and why.
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00:06 A lot of people seeking shelter in Germany don't realize how much resources have come to their limits.
00:12 [speaking German]
00:18 What do you think about the deportation plan?
00:21 That's what neo-Nazis, what the AfD was always talking about.
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01:52 This part of the camp was added last year because we realized we need additional places.
02:01 So we built an additional 3,000 places for refugees to stay.
02:08 [music]
02:13 In the beginning this was like a hub, a logistical center where people arrived
02:19 and from where they would pass on to other destinations.
02:22 Since then, things have changed because it has become more and more difficult for people to find private housing in Berlin.
02:30 Refugees actually stay permanently.
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03:40 If the demand increases again, what's going to happen?
04:04 All over Berlin, new building sites are being designated for either temporary container villages
04:11 and also for permanent new buildings.
04:14 So there's a new building program and of course that takes time.
04:18 But at the moment, we have the emergency housing and we need it.
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07:19 The current government, when they took office, they signed a coalition agreement
07:23 where they said we want a shift of paradigm in migration policy.
07:28 There are a lot of people who say 2015-16 should never repeat,
07:33 where more than one million Syrians mostly came to Germany.
07:38 The conservative party is going into a much more stricter and tougher rule.
07:44 With these really large numbers and also this whole feeling of losing control
07:49 by the many people in the electorate, the discourse got much more agitated.
07:55 Of course, also with the success of the right-wing populists,
07:58 the alternative for Germany.
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09:01 For the first time after the Second World War,
09:08 a very open fascist party is rising to power,
09:13 especially in the east of Germany.
09:15 We have on one side a government which is moving to the right
09:20 and also on the other side a mass movement from the very right.
09:25 This dynamic is part of the problem.
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09:58 [BLANK_AUDIO]