Berlin’s immigration authorities are moving to deport four young foreign residents on allegations related to participation in protests against Israel’s war on Gaza, an unprecedented move that raises serious concerns over civil liberties in Germany.

The deportation orders, issued under German migration law, were made amid political pressure and over internal objections from the head of the state of Berlin’s immigration agency.

The internal strife arose because three of those targeted for deportation are citizens of European Union member states who normally enjoy freedom of movement between E.U. countries. None of the four has been convicted of any crimes.

“What we’re seeing here is straight out of the far right’s playbook,” said Alexander Gorski, a lawyer representing two of the protesters. “You can see it in the U.S. and Germany, too: Political dissent is silenced by targeting the migration status of protesters.”

  • @[email protected]OP
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    06 days ago

    None of the protesters are accused of any particular acts of vandalism or the de-arrest at the university

      • @[email protected]OP
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        6 days ago

        Other people present at the same protest are accused of doing these things. Not these people. Scroll up to the article summary I posted

        None of the four has been convicted of any crimes.

        • @[email protected]
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          06 days ago

          Under German migration law, authorities don’t need a criminal conviction to issue a deportation order

          • @[email protected]OP
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            06 days ago

            Okay clearly you are not even interested whether the students were guilty. The essense of your argument condenses to

            “Yes but unlike in America, in Germany this is legal!”