"Mass expulsions from Germany to Poland" -- journalist Aleksandra Fedorska of Tysol.pl sounds the alarm, publishing the police log from Pasewalk -- a German town in the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania -- dated April 29.

As we read in the published log, "it began on Sunday at approximately 12:25 p.m. following a citizen report, when two Afghan nationals and four Pakistani nationals were detained at the Bismark bus stop."

"They were traveling from Gellin toward Bismark. They stated that they had arrived on foot from Poland on their own and had previously traveled via the so-called Belarus route,"

the document states.

"Another 25-year-old Afghan was detained in Grambow by officers of the Main Customs Office in Stralsund. He did possess a valid passport, but lacked the required residence document,"

the German police report.

The log further describes how, in the evening hours, forces from the Joint German-Polish Service Post in Pomellen, on the road connecting Pomellen with Ladenthin, just before Ladenthin, detained three Somali nationals.

"A 19-year-old woman and two teenagers (aged 16 and 17) had also walked from the border to the point of detention. The 16-year-old Somali was transferred to the VG Youth Welfare Office, while the remaining nine were released from custody with starter certificates for EAE Stern-Buchholz or Nostorf-Horst,"

it was reported.

"On Monday at approximately 5:43 a.m., on train RE 5350 from Szczecin to Pasewalk -- following a telephone tip from the conductor about passengers boarding at Grambow station -- five more persons were detained at the Pasewalk/Ost stop. During the check, four Pakistanis and one Afghan did not present documents authorizing their stay in Germany,"

the German police log continues. According to the migrants' statements, all five had traveled to Germany via the Belarus route; these persons were detained and, upon completion of police procedures, returned through the Linken border crossing.

The last case occurred at approximately 10:25 a.m., when a patrol of the joint service unit Vorpommern/Greifswald checked three teenage Somalis aged 16 and 17 and a 19-year-old Algerian in Ladenthin.

"They, too, did not possess documents authorizing their stay in Germany, and were therefore detained. The teenagers were transferred at 8:20 p.m. to the Youth Welfare Office of the Vorpommern-Greifswald district, while the Algerian was returned to Poland,"

the German police concluded.

It has been known for months that Poland's western neighbor -- Germany -- expels tens of thousands of unwanted, illegal immigrants to Poland every year. In December of last year, we reported that according to data from the German Interior Ministry, in 2024 Germany expelled a shocking number of nearly 10,000 immigrants to Poland. This practice is not abating; indeed, it is gaining momentum.

This is ostensibly taking place on the basis of the "Dublin III Agreement," under which EU countries agreed that asylum procedures take place in the country to which the migrant arrives in Europe. If a migrant finds themselves in another country, that country has the right to send them back to the country where they crossed the EU border. However, Italy, Spain, and Greece typically allow arrivals to travel freely and subsequently do not take them back. All indications are that Poland is the only country that diligently complies with these rules.

"Italy accepted only four out of several thousand refugees in 2024. Poland is completely different: the neighboring country accepts every caught 'Dublin' refugee,"

a German administrative judge quoted by the portal B.Z-Berlin praised the Poles.