On Sunday, Dehm told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper that he had taken the boy to his holiday home on Lake Maggiore in the Italian Alps for a few days before bringing him by car through Switzerland to Germany.
In an interview with Sputnik Germany, Dehm confirmed that he decided to help the boy, who wanted to be reunited with his father living in Germany.
Linken-Politiker schmuggelt Flüchtling nach Deutschland @BILD @BILDamSONNTAG https://t.co/C6j6dGuQIR
— Ralf Schuler (@drumheadberlin) 11 сентября 2016 г.
He said that he was very much surprised about the media outcry over the matter and that he does not consider himself a "hero of the movement for refugees."
"When you see a concrete trouble you will not think twice. The refugee I helped is under twenty. He is a smart young man who speaks English and takes an interest in the German Constitution and European music. He promised me that upon getting an education, he would return to his homeland to help restore his country," he said.
Dem said that he does not even want to think about what would have happened to this young man if he had failed to give him a helping hand.
"You see, I have two children and if I knew my son was somewhere lingering, [living] out his days somewhere, I would have dug a tunnel and pulled him out," he said.
"Of course," he said, "they are not to blame for it. But we, the Left Party politicians, should be interested in the economic revival in those countries."
He added that he wished he could take ten billion euros from the military budget and inject into developing countries so as to prevent highly educated people from leaving their home countries.
Dehm said that he is not worried about the imminent legal consequences of his action, saying that he is waiting for explanations from prosecutors and police "who said yesterday that they had opened a criminal case against me." He said he'd taken the right path when he brought the young man to Germany.
"I want to protect our Constitution which declares, in particular, that human dignity is inviolable, namely, the dignity of a person, not that of Germans. This is the most important thing. If they want to open a criminal case against this principle – оkay," he said.
In late August, a study issued by the Nuremberg-based Institute for Employment Research (IAB) indicated that up to 400,000 refugees may arrive in Germany before the end of 2016 if the political situation remains unchanged.
Europe is struggling to find a solution to the massive refugee crisis, with hundreds of thousands of refugees fleeing conflict-torn countries in the Middle East and North Africa in order to reach stable and wealthy European countries, such as Germany and Sweden.
The EU border agency Frontex detected over 1.83 million illegal border crossings in 2015, in contrast to some 283,000 in 2014. Of these, more than 1 million net arrivals streamed into Germany, according to the German Federal Statistical Office.