A former official of Germany's Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF) is under investigation over allegations that she, along with four others, accepted bribes from some 1,200 refugees in exchange for granting them asylum.

The director of BAMF's regional Bremen office between 2013 and 2017 allegedly accepted hundreds of asylum applicants, mostly from Iraq's Yazidi community, who may not have otherwise fulfilled the necessary criteria.

What we know so far

Bremen's prosecution service announced on Friday that six people were under investigation for the alleged corruption and bribery that took place in the state's regional migration office.

Besides the former director of the Bremen migration office, three lawyers, an interpreter and an intermediary are also targeted in the investigation.

The suspects allegedly ensured that asylum seekers were deliberately taken to the migration office in Bremen to have their applications filed.

Authorities raided eight locations in Bremen and Lower Saxony on Wednesday and Thursday, including at least two law offices.

Read more: Acceptance rates for asylum seekers vary between German states

'Gang-style inducement' at Germany's migration offices

A spokeswoman for the Bremen public prosecutor said the six suspects were under investigation for "gang-style inducement to make improper applications for asylum."

The spokesman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Steffen Seibert, refused to speculate what consequences the incident could have for the country's migration offices. These "extremely serious allegations" first have to be resolved, he said.

Social Democrat (SPD) lawmaker Burkhard Lischka called for a "comprehensive explanation" from the government and insisted that it release its findings ahead of the next meeting of Interior Ministry officials.

Linda Teuteberg from the Free Democrats (FDP) said the coalition government "reacted far too late to the warning signs from the BAMF following the opening of the country's borders in the autumn of 2015." It was clear that there would be room for abuse and corruption, she added.

Read more: Almost half of rejected asylum seekers in Germany winning on appeal

BAMF still struggling to keep up with migrant influx: Germany's migration office has come under intense scrutiny following the 2015 refugee crisis. The decision to allow around one million migrants to settle in Germany forced the BAMF to more than double its staff from 3,000 to 7,300 to handle the influx. Nevertheless, the agency has consistently fallen short of its own integration goals. Concerns about integration and security in Germany have also led to a sharp rise in support for the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), which entered parliament for the first time following elections in September.

Read more: Refugee children making a new life in Germany

Lured by fine dining: According to the Bremen prosecutor's office, authorities could not yet confirm whether the six suspects had accepted cash or other financial incentives in exchange for asylum permits. However, according to local media, the Bremen migration officer is believed to have at least received bribes in the form of invitations to restaurants.

Yazidis escaping war-torn Iraq: The Yazidis are a Kurdish religious community originally from northwestern Iraq. Back in 2013, when the first instances of graft at Bremen's migration offices are alleged to have taken place, they would have received no special treatment for asylum in Germany. That changed, however, after the "Islamic State" jihadi group seized much of their land in August 2014, killing or enslaving many Yazidi captives as others fled the region.

BAMF numbers still under debate: According to German media, the number of refugees thought to have received asylum in exchange for bribes could be as high as 2,000. However, the Bremen prosecutor disputes these reports, saying investigators were only reckoning with around 1,200 cases.

Read more: Refugee rift in Angela Merkel government sparks war of words

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dm/msh(dpa, AP, AFP)