Germany migrants: Plans to keep asylum seekers in 'anchor centres' Published duration 29 March 2018 Related Topics Europe migrant crisis

image copyright Getty Images image caption Asylum seekers would be kept in the centres until a decision on their requests is made

Germany's new interior minister is pressing ahead with controversial plans to hold asylum seekers in centres until their right to stay is determined.

Under Horst Seehofer's proposals, migrants are to be kept in so-called "anchor centres" for up to 18 months while their requests are processed.

Critics say keeping people in centres can lead to violence and make it harder for them to integrate in society.

The first centre is likely to be set up in Bavaria this year, officials say.

Mr Seehofer has long been a vocal critic of Chancellor Angela Merkel's refugee policies and has vowed to speed up asylum procedures and increase deportations.

Building the first centre in Bavaria before October's state election had "the highest priority", Deputy Interior Minister Stephan Mayer said.

"I'm confident that we can present more detailed plans after the Easter weekend," he told German daily Süddeutsche Zeitung (in German).

Migrants with a good chance of staying in Germany would be allowed to leave the centres, he added, without giving details.

Critics also say processing the requests often takes more than the 18-month period proposed by Mr Seehofer, meaning that migrants could be kept in the centres for much longer.

image copyright AFP image caption Horst Seehofer is a critic of Chancellor Angela Merkel's refugee policies

More than one million migrants arrived in Germany as part of Mrs Merkel's open-door policy in 2015.

The backlash sparked by her policy helped fuel the country's far right in last year's election - the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party entered the federal parliament for the first time - and led to the worst electoral performance in almost 70 years for her CDU party.