The Phnom Penh Post

EU asylum deadlock continues

- Lachlan Carmichael

EU COUNTRIES conceded on Tuesday that they were a long way from breaking a two-year deadlock over reforming the bloc’s asylum rules by a deadline this month amid a “harder political climate” following right-wing election gains in Italy.

Key European Union ministers and officials meeting in Luxembourg were lukewarm or even opposed to Bulgaria’s new compromise plan on how to close an east-west rift over the reforms before a June 28-29 summit in Brussels.

“The current state of negotiatio­ns is not acceptable,” Stephan Mayer, a senior German interior ministry official, told reporters as he arrived for the talks. “We are not ready to accept [the plan].”

Mayer, whose country is Europe’s top migrant destinatio­n, said Italy, its southern EU neighbours and eastern European countries also criticised at least parts of the plan.

Migration Minister Helene Fritzon of Sweden, a key migrant destinatio­n, said chances of a compromise may even be tougher following rightwing gains in elections in Italy and Slovenia.

“It is a harder climate, a harder political climate in Europe today,” Fritzon told reporters.

Coming to power amid public discontent over the migration and unemployme­nt crises, Italy’s populist coalition government has denounced the draft reforms.

“Italy and Sicily cannot be Europe’s refugee camp,” new hardline interior minister Mat- teo Salvini said on Sunday in Sicily’s port of Pozzallo, a migrant landing point.

The reforms, he said, condemn Italy and other Mediterran­ean countries to continue bearing the burden of an unpreceden­ted migration crisis for the 28-nation bloc, which peaked in 2015.

Standing in for Salvini in Luxembourg is Maurizio Massari, Italy’s envoy to the EU in Brussels.

EU leaders in December set an end-of-June deadline for an overhaul of the so-called Dublin rules to create a permanent mechanism to deal Aquarius

with migrants in the event of a new emergency.

Under existing rules, countries where migrants first arrive are required to process asylum requests. Italy, Greece and Spain are the main entry points to Europe.

EU cooperatio­n deals with Turkey and Libya, the main transit countries, have helped to slow, at least for now, the flow of migrants into Europe since 2015.

Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia have either refused outright or resisted taking in refugees since the Commission first pushed through temporary quotas in 2015 as a way to ease the burden on frontline states Italy and Greece.

‘Alleviate burden’

The summer of that year saw a surge in mass drownings in the Mediterran­ean as Europe’s worst migration crisis since World War II peaked with hundreds of thousands of people fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East and elsewhere.

Under an emergency plan, EU member countries agreed to relocate to other parts of the bloc 160,000 Syrians and other refugees from Italy and Greece within two years. Only 34,690 people have been relocated as most people made their own way to Germany and other wealthy northern countries amid the chaotic EU response to the crisis.

According to documents seen by AFP, Bulgaria calls for “alleviatin­g [the] burden from the frontline” states and “curbing secondary movements” of asylum seekers who land in one EU country and travel to another.

Eastern countries place a priority on stopping secondary movements, which caused so much chaos in recent years that countries in Europe’s passportfr­ee Schengen zone re-establishe­d border checks.

In a nod to Rome and Athens, the Bulgarian proposals call for the compulsory relocation of asylum seekers, but only as a last resort.

At the outset of a crisis, financial and other support are supposed to kick in automatica­lly under the plan.

EU capitals like Budapest, which has spearheade­d opposition to Muslim and other migrants, have stood firm against mandatory relocation.

As a further sop to the eastern countries, people will be relocated only in exceptiona­l cases and member states will have the “flexibilit­y” to reduce some of the numbers allotted to them.

Under the proposal, frontline states face increased “responsibi­lity” to register arrivals.

Dimitris Avramopoul­os, the EU commission­er for migration, played down the importance of the June 30 deadline.

“If we have to extend it for some weeks, it is not the end of the world,” Avramopoul­os told reporters.

 ?? GOULIAMAKI/AFP LOUISA ?? A migrant rests on the deck of the MV as it sails into the Sicilian port of Messina on May 14.
GOULIAMAKI/AFP LOUISA A migrant rests on the deck of the MV as it sails into the Sicilian port of Messina on May 14.

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