Asylum industry: 13,000 euros a month for Syrian migrants in Germany

Head office of ‘kinego gGmbH’ in Bochum. Dorstenerstrasse 90

The fact that huge sums of money are circulating in the asylum system has not just been known since yesterday. A new case makes it clear that the accommodation of underage substitute migrants in host families has long since become a business model in Germany.

Documents show how unscrupulously the German social system is exploited by the asylum industry. Specifically, this case concerns a Syrian who has been living in Germany since 2015 and is based in Hagen, North Rhine-Westphalia. Osama H., who was coincidentally born on the 1st of January 2001, is officially at least 23 years old. Recently, Osama apparently became aware that independent youth organisations were looking for people to take in unaccompanied minor asylum seekers living in their homes. He then decided to take on this role as a single person.

On the 21st of December 2023, an initial contract was signed between the Gladbeck Youth Welfare Office and the independent provider ‘kinego gGmbH’. The company from Bochum describes its task as follows: ‘kinego gGmbH looks for suitable host families and endeavours to find the best match between the host families and the young people.’ In short: the youth welfare office documents the illegal migrants who need accommodation and kinego finds host families. Osama recognises the opportunity and immediately takes in two young people. Interestingly, both young people also happen to have a birthday on the 1st of January. According to the contract, Osama received 4,074 euros a month from the youth welfare office – at the expense of the German taxpayer – for the two young people alone.

However, the already disastrously high sum, which is only earned by a small proportion of Germans each month, is by no means enough. Shortly after the first two migrants, Osama takes in even more ‘young people’. On the 3rd of January 2024, another contract is signed, this time between the Remscheid Youth Welfare Office and the independent provider ‘kinego’. A 16-year-old teenager moves in with Osama. Strikingly, he had moved house shortly beforehand. Apparently, the first admissions have already paid off and Osama was able to move into a larger flat. This in turn means more space for other migrants: On the 16 of February, the Paderborn Youth Welfare Office placed a 17-year-old asylum seeker with H., and on the 15th of March, the Kamen Youth Welfare Office followed suit with another contract with ‘kinego’. This time, a 13-year-old boy moves in with H., the fifth child. Through this deal, Osama manages to earn 13,000 euros a month.

This specific case makes it clear how certain stakeholders profit from population exchange and the associated suffering of the locals. This must stop! We don’t need an asylum industry, we need a remigration industry that deports millions of people!

Asylindustrie: 13.000 Euro im Monat für syrischen Migranten

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