Journalist Aleksandra Fedorska published the response from the Polish Ministry of Interior and Administration regarding individuals transferred by Germany to Poland and those "not admitted to Germany."
Journalist Aleksandra Fedorska has long covered the topic of migrant deportations from Germany to Poland. She has now put the question to the Polish Interior Ministry.
In response to the journalist's inquiry, the Polish Ministry of Interior and Administration stated that "from January 1 to June 14, 2024, Germany transferred a total of 290 foreigners to Poland, of whom 164 were transferred under readmission — a bilateral agreement — and 126 under the Dublin procedure."
It is worth noting, however, that the Interior Ministry also uses the term "not admitted to Germany," which in Aleksandra Fedorska's view "is misleading, because these individuals were apprehended, had their identities checked, and were deported on German territory."
The Interior Ministry reported that 3,578 persons were "not admitted to Germany," of whom 63 percent were Ukrainians.
I have the response from @MSWiA_GOV_PL on the subject of deportations from Germany to Poland. - 63% are Ukrainians - The Interior Ministry uses the term "not admitted to Germany" for these individuals In my assessment, this term is misleading, because they were apprehended, had their identities checked, and were deported on... pic.twitter.com/4RhBo5fJ7U — Aleksandra Fedorska (@a_fedorska) June 26, 2024
I have the response from @MSWiA_GOV_PL on the subject of deportations from Germany to Poland. - 63% are Ukrainians - The Interior Ministry uses the term "not admitted to Germany" for these individuals In my assessment, this term is misleading, because they were apprehended, had their identities checked, and were deported on... pic.twitter.com/4RhBo5fJ7U