The suspected Solingen stabber apparently exhausted all legal remedies to avoid deportation. What is striking is that he received targeted help from lawyers who know asylum law exactly and apply every paragraph in the interests of their clients, with the aim of extending their stay in Germany, even though the person's status does not actually speak for this. Therefore, there is now an accusation that there is a de facto deportation prevention industry in Germany. The criticism of asylum law is becoming louder and louder, the tenor: it is no longer up to date. The suspected IS terrorist should never have reached the refugee accommodation in Solingen , but he managed not only to outwit the responsible immigration authorities, but also to find loopholes in current international law and the so-called Dublin Regulation , a regulation on responsibility for asylum procedures. If a well-informed lawyer points out to his client about the legal deadlines that there are six months in which he would have to be deported to Bulgaria, then almost every client comes up with the idea of getting these six months behind them. The assassin fled Syria in December 2022 via the so-called Balkan route . After his asylum application in Bielefeld was rejected, he managed to avoid deportation in June 2023, playing for time. Only four days after the end of the six-month transfer period, he reported to the authorities and from then on enjoyed subsidiary protection. The problem is the legal situation, which dates back to a time when this mass migration did not exist in Europe and therefore should have been changed. The traffic light coalition has refused this. Federal Interior Minister Nancy Faeser can be celebrated for having agreed on a new European asylum system because she has refrained from establishing the eternal responsibility of the country of first entry there. But there is not only criticism of the federal government. NRW Refugee Minister Josefine Paul from the Greens admits that the local authorities have failed in the system. The assassin is said to have been found in the central accommodation facility in Paderborn before and after the failed deportation attempt , but this important information was not passed on to the Central Immigration Office. In addition, the responsible authority is said not to have organized a new repatriation flight for the Syrian, a serious mistake, but apparently not an isolated case. In the first half of this year alone , 14,000 deportations failed in Germany. The Green refugee minister from North Rhine-Westphalia, Josefine Paul, described the system as a whole as dysfunctional and highlighted this failed deportation. On June 5, 2023, the authorities came to the facility in Paderborn at around 2:30 a.m., did not find the 26-year-old Syrian and did not try to find him in the facility a second time. Absurdly, the man appeared again at the accommodation in the morning of the same day, but the authorities in Paderborn did not inform the responsible authority in Bielefeld. She only tried to meet the man once and found that there were no more return flights within the six-month period. Therefore, no further attempt was made to find him, as he could not be brought back to his country of origin anyway. This should be prevented in the future: There should be fixed dates on which multiple attempts are made to meet the person. Binding return flights should be booked immediately so that the deadline does not expire again. These are the proposals of the black-green state government. The processing continues in the meantime. Today, Interior Minister Herbert Reul wants to give a situation report on knife violence in North Rhine-Westphalia. The Interior and Integration Committee in North Rhine-Westphalia will meet on Thursday, and on Friday the North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament will meet for a special session on the events in Solingen . NRW is doing everything it can to advance the reappraisal. Politicians must prevent such failed deportations from burdening the country in the future. We will of course be there live during the presentation by Interior Minister Herbert Reul.