PULSE POINTS:
❓What Happened: Crime statistics reveal that nearly half of the criminal suspects in Austria in 2024 were foreigners.
👥 Who’s Involved: Austrian Interior Minister Gerhard Karner, foreign criminals, youth criminals.
📍 Where & When: A report on Austrian crime statistics was released by Karner on April 14.
💬 Key Quote: “The number of crimes among ten to 14-year-olds has almost doubled in the last five years. Above all, the number of Syrian suspects clearly stands out here.” — Austrian Interior Minister Gerhard Karner.
⚠️ Impact: The statistics reveal how overrepresented foreigners are in criminal reports in Austria.
IN FULL:
Despite representing around 20 percent of the overall population, foreigners accounted for nearly 50 percent of the criminal suspects in Austria last year. Of the over 335,000 criminal suspects investigated by police in the European Union (EU) member state in 2024, 46.8 percent were foreign nationals.
The top sources of foreign criminals are Romania, Germany, and Syria, with Syrians seeing a 30 percent increase in crimes compared to the prior year. The data, presented by Interior Minister Gerhard Karner, also reveals a surge in youth crime across the country. Crimes attributed to children aged 10 to 14 increased by nearly 100 percent, with around half being foreigners.
“The number of crimes among ten to 14-year-olds has almost doubled in the last five years. Above all, the number of Syrian suspects clearly stands out here,” Interior Minister Karner said. Due to the increase, the Interior Minister has suggested expanding facilities for repeat youth criminals, while others have called for increased fines for school absences.
Dominik Nepp, the leader of the populist Freedom Party (FPOe) in Vienna, stated that the age of criminal responsibility should be reduced to 12 years old and said that Austria’s immigration and border policies also contributed to the surge in criminality.
The anti-mass migration FPOe, led by Herbert Kickl, came first in the last Austrian national election and looked to form a government earlier this year, but talks between them and the center-right Austrian People’s Party collapsed.