German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer on Wednesday named a new head to the embattled Federal Office of Migration and Refugee (BAMF).

Hans-Eckhard Sommer, who is reportedly known as a "harter Hund" (tough dog) in government circles, was previously director responsible for foreigner and asylum law at the regional Interior Ministry in the southern state of Bavaria.

In a press conference alongside Seehofer, the 56-year-old lawyer said he would seek to speed up the asylum decisions without sacrificing quality and fairness.

The appointment now awaits Cabinet approval.

Read more: Germany's Horst Seehofer fires head of BAMF migrant and refugee agency

Former BAMF head Jutta Cordt was fired on Friday

BAMF scandal in Bremen

BAMF, which processes asylum applications for the federal Interior Ministry, has been at the center of a scandal after it emerged that its office in the northwestern city of Bremen had improperly approved 1,200 asylum applications from 2013 to 2016. A recent investigation indicates, however, that the number of improper approvals was lower than initially reported.

Read more: Glossary of terms: asylum, refugees, migration

Seehofer fired former BAMF chief Jutta Cordt on Friday. She had only been in the position since 2017.

Seehofer heads the conservative Christian Social Union (CSU), the Bavarian sister party of German Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democratic Union (CDU).

The CSU and Merkel have been at loggerheads in recent days over Seehofer's call to turn back most refugees at the German border, a move Merkel opposes in favor of a Europe-wide solution.

cw, amp/rc (dpa, AFP, KNA, epd)

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