The Phnom Penh Post

Merkel readies for talks, agrees refugee cap

- Frank Zeller

GERMAN Chancellor Angela Merkel said yesterday she would start coalition talks next week, but trouble was brewing between potential government partners over the flashpoint issue of refugees.

The left-leaning Greens, one of the potential partners in Merkel’s fourth-term government, voiced strong scepticism over an agreement reached in her conservati­ve camp to limit refugee entries at 200,000 a year.

The Greens’ co-leader Katrin GoeringEck­ardt labelled the deal “a formulaic compromise”, while her counterpar­t Cem Ozdemir said: “I’m curious how they will explain it to us.”

Merkel had agreed that figure in marathon talks on Sunday with her Bavarian sister party the CSU, which has blamed her liberal asylum policy for sparking the rise of the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) party.

CSU chief Horst Seehofer – long a vocal critic of Merkel’s decision to allow in over 1 million asylum seekers since 2015 – had vowed to close his party’s exposed “right flank” and win back AfD voters.

In the end, in what Merkel labelled a “classic compromise”, Seehofer’s longstandi­ng demand for an iron-clad refugee “upper limit” was softened to a flexible benchmark figure that could be adjusted during humanitari­an crises.

The draft deal includes other caveats, stressing that no asylum seekers would be turned away before their cases are assessed.

With that compromise in the bag, Merkel announced yesterday she would launch coalition talks onWednesda­y next week with the two other parties – first the pro-business and liberal Free Democrats (FDP), then the Greens.

Those talks would be followed by an all-party meeting two days later, expected to kick off a long process in which all sides haggle over policy red lines and ministeria­l posts, possibly into next year.

Merkel won a fourth term in the September 24 vote, but the AfD poached 1 million votes from her conservati­ve bloc, leaving her without an obvious coalition to lead Europe’s largest economy.

The only option now is to team up with the FDP and Greens, an alliance unpreceden­ted at the national level.

If they want to form a government and avoid fresh elections which could further boost the AfD, all sides must strike compromise­s on tricky issues from EU policy to the Greens’ core demands on phasing out coal plants and fossil fuel cars. But the first stumbling block is expected to be the topic of refugees and migration.

The Greens’ Goering-Eckardt said the CDU/CSU deal is a “compromise that only needs to hold until the first meeting with the FDP and Greens”.

“Mr Seehofer got his 200,000 figure, Mrs Merkel won the agreement that no one is rejected at the border,” she said.

“How can you just make a cut at 200,000?” she added. “I still can’t imagine how that would work.”

CSU General Secretary Andreas Scheuer fired back that “the Greens must finally return to reality”.

“The loss of reality with open borders – where everyone can come to us without any rules – that we won’t accept in a new coalition.”

 ?? JOHN MACDOUGALL/AFP ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel, leader of the conservati­ve Christian Democratic Union, gives a press conference in Berlin yesterday.
JOHN MACDOUGALL/AFP German Chancellor Angela Merkel, leader of the conservati­ve Christian Democratic Union, gives a press conference in Berlin yesterday.

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