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Migration Fears Turn EU Borderless Dreams into Traffic Nightmares
The Straits Times
|July 18, 2025
Several countries have put up checkpoints amid voter backlash over asylum seekers
SLUBICE, Poland — The service 983 bus braked shortly after it crossed the Oder River from Poland into Germany, easing inside a large tent and stopping.
German police officers boarded, pulled off a man with gray hair and stuffed luggage for further inspection, then they sent the driver on his way.
The delay took about eight minutes. It was an example of a headache that has quickly become routine for people crossing between the two countries, as Germany makes a public show of cracking down on migration.
Amid a voter backlash over the millions of asylum seekers who entered the country over the past decade, German officials have thrown up checkpoints to search vehicles crossing their borders from all sides.
Neighboring countries including Austria and, starting last week, Poland, have followed suit.
The checkpoints are beginning to undermine the ideal of free movement in the European Union. In a series of agreements dating back 40 years, members of the EU effectively declared that they would allow one another's citizens to cross without having to clear border security.
But the pacts allow countries to temporarily reimpose border controls "as a last resort" in the event of a serious threat to national security or public policy.
Germany, Poland, Austria, France, Italy and the Netherlands have all cited immigration concerns when reinstating border checks in 2025.
Enhanced checks have stopped 110 migrants per day on average from entering Germany since early May, when the new government, under Chancellor Friedrich Merz, tightened border security procedures, Interior Ministry officials said.
That is up from 83 per day in the first four months of 2025.
The increased checks are snarling traffic and annoying commuters, long-haul truckers and other travelers.
This story is from the July 18, 2025 edition of The Straits Times.
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