The holder of a
Syrian passport found near the body of one of the gunmen from Friday night's
attacks passed through Greece
in October, a Greek minister said, and another suspected attacker was thought
to have entered Europe the same way.
"The days of
uncontrolled immigration and illegal entry can't continue just like that. Paris changes
everything," Bavarian Finance Minister Markus Soeder told Welt am Sonntag
newspaper.
His comments came
after Bavarian state premier Horst Seehofer, leader of Merkel's sister party,
the Christian Social Union (CSU), urged better protection of Germany 's frontier and called for stricter
controls at Europe 's external borders.
"The CSU
stands behind the chancellor, but it would be good if Angela Merkel
acknowledged that the opening of the border for an unlimited period of time was
a mistake," Soeder said.
German officials
indicated that Merkel saw no reason to revise her stance on refugees in the
wake of the Paris
attacks.
But the head of Germany 's
domestic intelligence services also sounded the alarm, calling for
"orderly procedures" regarding the handling of the daily entry of
thousands of refugees and warning extremists could exploit the sometimes
chaotic migration situation.
While German police
are currently conducting passport checks at border crossings and in border
areas, thousands of refugees are thought to be coming into the country without
any checks.
Soeder said a
government had a duty to care for its own people as a priority, adding Germany needed
a migration strategy with an official cap to limit the numbers of new arrivals.
If Europe's external
borders could not be protected, Germany
had to secure its own frontier, he said. This could also include unconventional
steps like closing border crossings, Soeder said.
"One million
is way to much. Conceivable at best is an orderly immigration of between
200,000 and 300,000 people," Soeder said.
Merkel has
repeatedly refused to announce a national cap, saying there cannot be a limit
to the constitutionally enshrined right to asylum. But she has said Europe should think about agreeing on joint quotas for
refugees.
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