Some refugees who descended on the tiny German village of Sumte have started leaving the 'boring' backwater where 'there is nothing to do' - and accused the authorities of lying to them.

A couple from Syria, who arrived at the hamlet at lunchtime today walked out of the refugee holding centre an hour later - announcing; ‘We don’t want to be stuck here in the wilderness.’

Syrians Morhav, 28, and his wife Noor, 19, said they were going to the train station and on their way to Frankfurt.

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Leaving: Syrians Morhav, 28, and his wife Noor, 19, (pictured) who arrived in Sumte this afternoon have already left saying they were going to the train station and go to Frankfurt

Accusations: Teacher Morhav and his wife Noor left Syria three weeks ago. They said claimed the German authorities had lied to them and told them they were being taken to Frankfurt, but instead they arrived in Sumte

The couple, who had arrived in Germany just three days beforehand, claimed the refugee agency had told them they were being taken to Frankfurt when they boarded a bus in Hannover.

Morhav, a teacher, told MailOnline: ‘They [the refugee agency] told us they were taking us to Frankfurt. But we got off the bus we found that had taken us to this wilderness.

‘My wife started crying. Her mother is in Frankfurt. She thought she would be taken to her family. But instead they have taken us here – to nowhere.

‘So we are going to go to Frankfurt. I don’t know how we will get there but we will.

‘We have walked across half of Europe already so we are prepared to go a little further.’

Four more bus loads carrying 200 more refugees arrived in the tiny German village of Sumte last night – quadrupling the population.

Young men, women and children were driven into the sprawling new migrant housing complex in Sumte, a hamlet in eastern Germany close to the river Elbe, under cover as darkness.

The new arrivals brings the refugee population to 300 - almost three times the original population of 102.

A further 200 refugees are expected in the coming days. And 250 have been allocated to the centre, created out of a series of empty government offices.

Influx: Tension is rising in Sumte, eastern Germany, where the 102 locals says they are being 'overwhelmed' by migrants as people arrive to sleep in an empty government office block (pictured, behind guarded gates)

Perfect location: Sumte was chosen as the site for a sprawling refugee centre because it is has empty government offices (pictured) which can sleep 1,000

'Underwhelmed': Married Morhav and Noor were left unimpressed with their new surroundings. ‘They [the refugee agency] told us they were taking us to Frankfurt. But we got off the bus we found that had taken us to this wilderness,' said Morhav

But some, like married couple Morhav and Noor are unimpressed with their new surroundings and have already left.

They fled the fighting in their native Syria a month ago after the home town became a war zone.

Morhav told MailOnline: ‘We did not want to leave Syria but we had to leave for our lives.

‘The journey was very difficult. We crossed the sea from Turkey to Greece and then through Serbia, Croatia and Slovenia. Slovenia was very bad. There was nothing to eat, nothing to drink and we had to sleep outside. It was very cold.

‘Now I want to do something to pay back all the people who have helped us. I am a teacher but I will do anything I can to repay our debt.’

Meanwhile Morhav offered a unique insight into the ethnic make-up inside the Sumte camp.

He claimed that less than a third of the residents of the 750-capacity centre are Syria, with the majority from Afghanistan. He said this was the same all through Europe.

'Overwhelmed': The first wave of 100 refugees arrived on Monday with a further 200 last night to instantly quadruple the size of the town. A further 450 are expected to arrive in the coming days

New home: The fist migrants who arrived in the nondescript town apparently didn't like what they found with one complaining, 'it's boring' and moaned there was no television or PlayStation

Morhav told MailOnline: ‘Only about 30 per cent of the people on the bus and at the centre are Syrian. Some 50 per cent of the people there are from Afghanistan – this is what we found all through Europe. About ten per cent are from Iraq and another ten per cent are from Africa.’

German welfare group Arbeiter-Samariter-Bund, that runs the Sumte camp, has refused to reveal the nationalities of the refugees taken to the centre.

Tension among the 102 original residents, who fear their community will be overwhelmed, and the local services swamped by the new arrivals have been rising.

The town's Neo-Nazi councillor, Holger Niemann, warned crime will rocket with the influx of migrants to a tiny German village where the population will be outnumbered by seven to one by the arrival of 750 refugees in the coming days.

They had fought against plans for 1,000-capacity refugee centre in their village. The authorities overruled their objections but agreed to scale the camp back to 750. The first 100 refugees, including Syrians, arrived on Monday night.

The sleepy village has become the symbol of Germany's struggle to cope with the overwhelming influx of migrants streaming into the country every day by the thousand.

Hate: Sumte's neo-Nazi councillor, Holger Niemann, claims most migrants are only interested in the €500-a-month benefits they will be entitled to once they are granted refugee status

Enough: 'They will be given houses but German people are not entitled to houses anymore,' said neo-nazi councillor Holger Niemann, who said 300,000 nationals of Germany are homeless

Accommodation: The newly arrived refugees and migrants, who will sleep in centres like this, have angered some locals. One told MailOnline: 'There are German people sleeping under bridges and they government does nothing to help them but they give everything to the refugees'

A woman in her 50s, who asked not to be identified, told MailOnline: 'We simply can’t take in this many. How can we cope with these numbers? There are too many people coming to Germany and too many people coming to our village. We cannot look after everyone. We cannot solve the problems of the whole world. We have a duty to look after the German people first.'

As the newcomers began to settle in a disused office block with makeshift beds on Monday, Niemann, accused Chancellor Angela Merkel of ignoring 'the 300,000 Germans who are homeless' while giving shelter, cash benefits and food to 'anyone who says they are Syrian'.

Niemann, 32, an elected member of the far-right UWL party, told MailOnline: 'Today it is 100 refugees, tomorrow there will be another 100 and then another 100 and then another 100, and another 100.

'There will be crime in this village, just like there was in the town nearby after they opened a refugee centre.

Niemann, who works cleaning cars at a run-down work-shop close to the refugee centre, claims the majority of migrants are only interested in the €500-a-month benefits they will be entitled to once they are granted refugee status.

Influx: Sumte, a sleepy village in eastern Germany, has been earmarked as home to 750 refugees. A councillor said Chancellor Angela Merkel had ignored 300,000 homeless Germans, while giving shelter, cash benefits and food to 'anyone who says they are Syrian'

German welfare group Arbeiter-Samariter-Bund, which has set up the Sumte camp, has refused to reveal the nationalities of the first batch who arrived in two buses on Monday.

With a population of just over 100, Sumte, was chosen as the site for a sprawling refugee centre for 1,000 because it is has empty government offices.

The sleepy village has become the symbol of Germany's struggle to cope with the overwhelming influx of migrants streaming into the country every day by the thousand.

An unemployed woman in her 50's, who asked not to be identified, told MailOnline: 'There are German people sleeping under bridges and they government does nothing to help them but they give everything to the refugees.