
Syria's interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa has attributed a controversial statement that 80% of the more than 900,000 Syrians in Germany should go back home within three years to German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.
Merz made the announcement during al-Sharaa's visit to Germany on Monday, and clarified a day later that "the figure of 80% returnees within three years was cited by the Syrian president."
The comment has produced hefty criticism of Merz from across the political spectrum.
Speaking at an event in London on Tuesday evening, al-Sharaa rejected Merz's latest claim.
During the Chatham House gathering, the moderator asked al-Sharaa whether the 80% figure came from him.
According to the organizer's translation, the Syrian leader replied that the statement was somewhat exaggerated. He said it was not he, but the chancellor who had said this. The Arabic original of the statement was initially not available.
Al-Sharaa went on to say that the return of Syrian refugees was linked to rebuilding in the country. He said enough jobs would have to be created and foreign companies attracted. The return of refugees would have to be organized. If the right circumstances were created then he would guarantee that 80% of people would return to their country, to Syria, according to the translation.
Critics were quick to warn that returning hundreds of thousands of Syrians living in Germany on such a short time frame would be extremely complicated.
The importance of Syrian workers to the German economy has also been underlined, while some lawmakers warned that missing the high-profile 80% target would provide further fodder for the far right.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
What is the 'Survivor 50' Challenge? Hidden immunity idols will be up for grabs in every U.S. state. - 2
Vote in favor of your favored spot to peruse - 3
This St Nick Truly Can Advise How To Drink And Hack Your Headache - 4
The 10 Most Progressive Logical Disclosures - 5
Medtronic has 'significant firepower' for multiple acquisitions, executives say
Shrapnel hits across central Israel, injuring several, causing property damage
New Year's Eve Live: Nashville's Big Bash: How to watch the star-studded country music special live
December’s full moon is the last supermoon of the year. Here’s what to know
As juries turn against social media for harming kids, Big Tech's invincibility starts to show cracks
Europe's powerful Ariane 6 rocket launches Sentinel-1D Earth-observation satellite to orbit (video)
Fiber is something most people could use more of. But experts advise caution with 'fibermaxxing'
5 Language Learning Applications
German politician urges more face-to-face interaction in digital age
Merck urges science-led US vaccine schedule after CDC trims childhood vaccine list












