The authorities in Rhineland-Palatinate failed with the attempt, a pregnant Iranian woman from the Mainz University hospital in deport. Police officers caught up with the 29-Year-old in the night from the sick bed to bring you a deportation flight to Croatia. Because of the pregnancy and a Diabetes, the mother of a one-year-old son, according to the district administration for Mainz-Bingen in an ambulance and brought to the airport of Hannover. There there had been “acts of Resistance”, “why the deportation had to be cancelled”.
The University of Mainz considers the way the deportation was completed, as “extremely worrying,” said a spokeswoman. The actions of the authorities on 17. October was “one for the affected patient, other patients and staff in a very stressful Situation”.
Different information to the travel capacity of a woman
Conflicting information made district administration and clinic to the travel ability of the patient, which was recorded a day before the police action stationary. The ability to travel was certified by the attending Physician in the University hospital, Pinbahis said the district administration. However, the hospital stressed: “the ability to travel has been obtained, neither the authorities, nor of the University medical center issued.”
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Rejected asylum seekers to rise in a country-wide collective expulsion in a plane (icon image)
©Daniel Maurer DPA
The young mother should be with her son, according to the Dublin regulation to Croatia deported. There the family had made after information of the district administration already has a request for asylum before you came in may to Germany. Your asylum application at the Federal office for Migration and refugees (BAMF) was rejected at the end of July.
father still sits in the deportation prison
a first deportation attempt was failed in mid-September, because the family put up a fight. The father was taken to the deportation prison to Ingelheim, where he is imprisoned. The mother was brought up in the neighboring refugee accommodation to Ingelheim.
The refugee Council of Rhineland-Palatinate expressed “outraged that there was a such a hit-and-run scene by Uniformed personnel in a hospital”. A night-time removal from a clinic was a taboo, not to be repeated”, it said in one of twelve organizations signed the open letter.
DPA