Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany's Merkel slams Belarus over refugee treatment

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has accused Belarus of using refugees to "undermine security." Her remarks come as the Taliban takeover of Afghanista­n fuels concerns that thousands of people could try to flee to Europe.

- tj/rs (dpa, Reuters)

German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Tuesday condemned Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko for using refugees as a way to put pressure on the EU.

Merkel was speaking after a meeting with Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas, whose country is helping fellow EU member Lithuania cope with a migrant surge on its border with Belarus.

"President Lukashenko is using refugees, for example from Iraq, in a hybrid way to undermine security, and, of course, we condemn this in the strongest possible terms," Merkel said at a news conference with Kallas.

EU officials accuse Minsk of deliberate­ly allowing people to pass illegally into the bloc to force it to lift sanctions imposed for the mistreatme­nt of the political opposition after the disputed 2020 presidenti­al election.

More than 4,000 migrants and refugees have reportedly crossed into Lithuania this year, compared with fewer than 100 in the whole of 2020. Other EU member states bordering on Belarus have also seen a strong rise in migrant arrivals.

What else did Merkel and Kallas say?

"We are closely coordinati­ng with European partners on everything. We will also try to take a common position because this hybrid kind of confrontat­ion, as used by Belarus, is an attack on all of us in the European Union," Merkel said.

Kallas echoed Merkel's comments, saying the Belarusian dictator was using refugees as a weapon against the EU.

The Estonian premier called for Belarus to be inflicted with fresh sanctions.

What is the EU doing about the situation?

EU foreign ministers are discussing further action at a crisis meeting called for Tuesday afternoon.

The bloc is ready to provide Lithuania with more border officers and financial aid to cope with the crisis, according to a draft statement for an extraordin­ary summit of interior ministers on Wednesday.

The issue of how the EU deals with migrants and refugees seems likely to figure strongly in the bloc's deliberati­ons in coming months, with thousands of people expected to try to flee to Europe from Afghanista­n after the country's takeover by the Taliban.

 ??  ?? Thousands of people are already in refugee reception centers in Lithuania
Thousands of people are already in refugee reception centers in Lithuania

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