Bundesregierung / Photographer: Julia Fassbender
Back to the graphical presentation
26 May 1993
By 521 votes to 132, the Bundestag approves amendments to the asylum law as proposed in the "asylum compromise".This places considerable restrictions on the interpretation of Article 16 of the federal constitution which, up to that point, had guaranteed asylum for political refugees in Germany. The so-called "ruling on third countries", provides particular limitations.29 May 1993
Five Turkish women die in Solingen in a racially motivated arson attack.1 November 1993
The "Asylum Seekers' Benefits Act" comes into effect. It regulates the extent and form of benefits to asylum seekers in Germany.1 November 1993
The Maastricht Treaty comes into effect. It declares issues of asylum policy, external border checks and immigration policy to be "matters of mutual interest".1 November 1993
The "Asylum Seekers' Benefits Act" comes into effect. It regulates the extent and form of benefits to asylum seekers in Germany.2 September 1994
The "Central Foreigners' Register Law" (AZR) provides a legal basis for the Central Foreigners' Register, which has been in existence since 1953.The database collects data on those foreigners in Germany who have a residency permit, those who are seeking asylum and those who are recognised asylum applicants. The AZR is criticised for its supposed discrimination against non-Germans.- Bundesregierung / Photographer: Arne Schambeck
26 January 1995
The Bundestag stages a remembrance on the 50th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp (27 January 1945).German Chancellor Helmut Kohl describes the systematic mass murder perpetrated at Auschwitz as "the darkest and most terrible chapter in German history". President of the Bundestag, Rita Süssmuth, emphasises that: "The crime that is Ausschwitz is beyond comparison. 20 March 1995
Dedication of a memorial to the book burning of 10 May 1933 on Bebelplatz in central Berlin.- Bundesregierung / Photographer: Bernd Kühler
6 - 8 May 1995
Worldwide commemorations for the 50th anniversary of the end of the Second World War.During the commemorative events, Chancellor Kohl explains in a statement that May 8 serves as an impetus to "work towards a framework for peace in Europe based on an unequivocal observance of each individual's human rights and on international humanitarian law". 27 January 1996
Introduction of the Day of Commemoration of the Victims of National Socialism, which for the first time is observed as a nationwide, legally enshrined commemoration.The date is chosen for its significance as the day of liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp on January 27, 1945.