German food bank to reopen membership to foreigners after row Published duration 4 April 2018 Related Topics Europe migrant crisis

image copyright EPA image caption With Essener Tafel's decision, foreigners will again be allowed to register

A major food bank in western Germany has said it will again allow foreigners to register for free food, reversing a decision that sparked a row.

The charity Essener Tafel said the restriction had always been a temporary one, needed because of the high proportion of foreigners being served.

It said it would now focus on single parents, families with children and the elderly, regardless of nationality.

Essener Tafel says it helps some 16,000 people in the city of Essen.

In January, it said that only German passport holders would be allowed to apply for new membership cards.

The restriction, the charity said, was necessary because 75% of those receiving food were foreigners, and that many elderly women and single mothers had stopped coming to the food bank.

Vandals sprayed "Nazis" on the charity's delivery vans.

Essener Tafel head Jörg Sartor said the restriction had nothing to do with xenophobia but was needed given the organisation's limited funds.

With the new decision, foreigners will again be allowed to register for the services.

image copyright AFP image caption Vandals sprayed "Nazis" on the vans

An estimated 1.2 million asylum seekers entered Germany during the migrant crisis of 2015-2016, more than half from war-torn Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan. The record influx boosted support for the anti-immigration Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.

Essener Tafel is part of a national food bank group called Tafel. Essen is part of Germany's old coal-and-steel hub in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW).

Like hundreds of other German food banks, Essener Tafel collects tonnes of surplus food at or past its sell-by date, which would otherwise be thrown away.

image copyright AFP image caption The charity said the restriction was needed because of the high share of foreigners being served

NRW has the highest number of asylum claims among the German states, data from Germany's national migration agency BAMF shows: it handled 22.4% of claims in February, followed by Bavaria (14.4%).