London (Parliament Politics Magazine) – The UK Foreign Office has issued a caution to holidaymakers staying within the European Union for their holidays this autumn and winter.
UK tourists journeying to either France OR Germany have been alerted by the Foreign Office over new entry conditions. The Foreign Office has given a warning to holidaymakers staying within the EU for their vacations this autumn and winter.
What are the new entry conditions for Germany?
“There are temporary border rules in place to travel into Germany,” the FCDO clarified. “Check the entry requirements for Germany.” It said: “A temporary reintroduction of border controls is currently in position at Germany’s land borders.”
The Federal Ministry of the Interior and Community notified the European Commission in September that it has ordered the temporary reintroduction of border control at Germany’s land borders with France, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Belgium and Denmark for six months, beginning September 16, 2024.
What prompted the UK Foreign Office’s warning?
Federal Minister of the Interior Nancy Faeser stated: “We are taking tangible action to reinforce our internal security, and we are taking a tough line against irregular migration. We are continuing to pursue this course. Until the new Common European Asylum System and other measures ensure robust protection for the EU’s external borders, we must also do more to maintain our national borders.
“These border control criteria include effective refusals of entry at the border – more than 30,000 people have been refused entry at the land borders with Poland, Austria, Switzerland and the Czech Republic just since October 2023. That is why we will extend our temporary border control to include all of Germany’s land borders, as I ordered today.”
The country’s interior minister also said the border checks would impede migration and “protect against the acute dangers presented by Islamist terrorism and serious crime,” but critics have condemned it as politically motivated and likely to be mostly ineffective. Greece’s prime minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, stated it would be unfair to “move to a logic of ad hoc exemptions from the Schengen agreement, with border authorities that will … hurt one of the fundamental achievements of the EU.”