Denmark extends identification checks on German border

Refugees and migrants wait to be transferred to the Moria registration centre after arriving at the port of Mytilene on the Greek island of Lesbos.
Refugees and migrants wait to be transferred to the Moria registration centre after arriving at the port of Mytilene on the Greek island of Lesbos.
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AFP, Copenhagen :The Danish government on Friday extended random identification checks along the country’s German border until May 3, saying they were needed to deter migrants from entering the country.”The pressure on Europe’s external borders is still high and refugee and migrant flows may rise significantly when the weather gets better,” Integration Minister Inger Stojberg said in a statement.”It is necessary to extend the border controls so that we ensure that large groups of refugees and migrants do not accumulate here in Denmark,” she added.The controls were introduced on January 4, hours after Sweden began requiring rail and ferry companies to verify the identities of people travelling from Denmark across the Oresund Strait, and have been extended four times.Last year Denmark largely served as a transit country for migrants travelling to Sweden, which until recently had some of Europe’s most generous asylum rules.Denmark received more than 21,000 asylum applications in 2015, a 44 percent jump from 2014, though significantly fewer than its northern neighbour, which registered 163,000 asylum applications in the same year.

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