Germany updates: Munich Airport plans deportation terminal

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Published 07/24/2025Published July 24, 2025last updated 07/24/2025last updated July 24, 2025

Germany's second-largest largest airport is reportedly planning a "repatriation terminal" to process migrant deportations. Meanwhile, German Catholics have criticized the humanitarian situation in Gaza. DW has more.

https://p.dw.com/p/4xwUq

A general view of the Munich International AirportMunich Airport is reportedly planning special terminal to process migrant deportationsImage: Leonhard Simon/REUTERS
Skip next section What you need to know

What you need to know

  • Munich Airport is reportedly planning special terminal to process migrant deportations
  • German Catholics have criticized the criticized the "catastrophic" humanitarian situation in Gaza

Welcome to DW's coverage of developments in Germany on Thursday, July 24.

Skip next section German Catholics criticize 'catastrophic' humanitarian crisis in Gaza

07/24/2025July 24, 2025

German Catholics criticize 'catastrophic' humanitarian crisis in Gaza

The Central Committee of German Catholics (ZdK) said on Thursday that it was "appalled" by the suffering being endured by Palestinians in the Gaza Strip and called on the German government to ensure the enforcement of international law.

"The humanitarian situation for the civilian population in Gaza is catastrophic," ZdK President Irme Stetter-Karp told the Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland (RND).

While acknowledging that Israel "has a legitimate right to defend itself against the terrorist organization Hamas," she said that didn't absolve the Israeli government from its responsibility to respect international law.

Stetter-Karp also said Israel's military operations were impacting the civilian population to an "unjustifiable" extent and highlighted the acute threat of starvation, illness and death facing children in the besieged enclave.

"We are aghast that 875 Palestinians have been killed while trying to access aid at the distribution centers in Gaza," she said. "This approach by the Israeli government must end immediately!"

Stetter-Karp also highlighted the plight of Palestinian Christians in the occupied West Bank, who she said were increasingly the targets of Israeli settler violence.

https://p.dw.com/p/4xwYw

Skip next section Munich airport planning special deportation terminal

07/24/2025July 24, 2025

Munich airport planning special deportation terminal

Germany's second-largest airport is reportedly planning to construct a special deportation terminal in which police will process the repatriation of migrants to be deported.

According to a planning document seen by the Reuters news agency, the so-called "repatriation terminal" at Munich Airport is to be around 60 meters long and spread over two floors.

The facility, which is designed to facilitate "up to 100 arrivals and departures processing up to 50 individual measures and group charter flights daily," is planned for 2028 and will also include a "central check-in in order to coordinate repatriations efficiently," according to the document.

German Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt and Bavarian Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann, both of the Christian Social Union (CSU), the Bavarian sister party of the conservative Christian Democrats (CDU), have taken a strong stance on deportations of migrants with criminal convictions or rejected asylum claims.

Munich Mayor Dieter Reiter, of the center-left Social Democrats (SPD), said the deportation of those convicted of crimes to their home countries was a sensible measure. "Therefore I don't think it's fundamentally wrong to propose such a terminal," he said.

But political support is not universal. Local Green Party politician Gülseren Demirel told the Süddeutsche Zeitung broadsheet: "We are more than critical of a specific terminal for deportations."

https://p.dw.com/p/4xwcg

Skip next section Welcome to our coverage

07/24/2025July 24, 2025

Welcome to our coverage

Guten Morgen! Welcome to DW's coverage of developments in Germany on Thursday, July 24.

Despite Germany's dramatic defeat in the Euro 2025 semifinal last night, we all have to carry on, so here's what's on the agenda today:

  • The Central Committee of German Catholics (ZdK) has the criticized the "catastrophic" humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip
  • Munich airport is planning a special new deportation terminal where police can process migrants leaving Germany
  • Everything else you need to know from Germany as it happens

https://p.dw.com/p/4xwWQ

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