euractiv.com 
<https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/news/up-to-25000-serbian-workers-obtain-german-employment-visas-annually/>
  


Up to 25,000 Serbian workers obtain German employment visas annually


Sofia Mandilara

~3 minutes

  _____  

Some 25,000 Serbians, particularly medical staff, apply for German work visas 
every year in search of better working conditions and few reasons to remain in 
the country.

According to recent data, the German Federal Employment Agency annually issues 
up to 25,000 visas for Serbian nationals. As demand for visas is far 
outstripping the processing capacities, allocation is made via 
computer-controlled random selection, with health workers amongst those most 
likely to leave.

EURACTIV Serbia spoke to several individuals who have sought better 
opportunities in Germany. M.F. got a job in Germany four years ago after almost 
two decades of working as a nurse in Belgrade. Due to low salaries, she decided 
to look for a job abroad.

“I passed the B1 German language, got a work visa and a job in a clinic with 
much better conditions. I have been here for five years, and I intend to stay 
here,” she said.

Her plans include further education. “I hope that my children, who stayed in 
Serbia with my ex-husband, will come here after finishing school. Most of my 
friends left Serbia, so there are fewer reasons to return there,” she added.

Another nurse from Serbia, now working in Germany, T, said, “In Serbia, I had 
to work two and sometimes three jobs to provide for my family. I couldn’t take 
it anymore, so I decided to leave.”

She found work through a job agency with her partner, who is also a medical 
technician.

“I arrived in Germany in September 2019. In six months, I passed the necessary 
exams and the B2 level of German language. It wasn’t easy for me to work, learn 
the language, and all that in a foreign country during the COVID-19 pandemic. I 
worked in that clinic for two years and decided to apply for a job in a clinic 
in Stuttgart,” she told EURACTIV.

Another citizen, GT, has recently received a visa extension, and she will soon 
apply for a visa for an unlimited stay in Germany.

“I completed an additional education for intensive patient care. I plan to stay 
here for at least another year. Unfortunately, In Serbia, nothing has changed 
regarding improving working conditions, which demotivates me to return. I am 
grateful to the agency that helped me find a job in Germany because now I see 
you can live with dignity,” she concludes.

(Milena Antonijević | EURACTIV.rs)


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