China Daily

EU set to beef up security on borders

- By EARLE GALE in London earle@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

The European Union will send an extra 10,000 border guards to its external boundaries in an attempt to stem the tide of illegal immigratio­n, Commission President JeanClaude Juncker said in his annual state of the union address in Strasbourg, France, on Wednesday.

He also spoke about the bloc’s other big issues — populism, terrorism and Brexit — and urged the British government to recognize the reality of its pending exit from the EU.

“We … ask the British government to understand that someone who leaves the union cannot be in the same privileged position as a member state,” he said. “If you leave the union, you are, of course, no longer part of our single market, and certainly not only in the parts of it you choose.”

But he said the United Kingdom will remain a close partner of the EU in political, economic and security terms, and noted that Britain and the EU should strive to negotiate a free-trade deal.

“The United Kingdom will never be an ordinary third country for us,” he said.

Juncker’s address marks the start of talks involving European politician­s and bureaucrat­s as the commission decides its annual work program.

He fleshed out his call for 10,000 additional border guards by saying he also does not want to see Europe militarize­d, noting long-term solutions to the migrant crisis and the threat of terrorism must be found, instead of “ad hoc solutions”.

“Europe must remain a tolerant, open continent,” he said. “Europe will never become a fortress, turning its back on the world, notably the part of the world which is suffering.”

This year’s speech, which was Juncker’s last because he is in the final year of his term, comes at a difficult time for Europe, with populist sentiment rising in many countries. Recent polls in Poland, Italy, Hungary, Austria and Sweden have seen anti-immigratio­n parties fare well and, with voters set to take part in Europe-wide elections in May, Juncker called for a more united, strong, and democratic union, instead of a fragmented one.

He also said cooperatio­n, instead of charity, should be the bedrock of a new EU-Africa alliance that could eventually lead to a continent-tocontinen­t free-trade agreement.

And he said he would like to see the internatio­nal prestige of the euro currency increase through its strategic use.

“The euro must become the active instrument of a new, more sovereign, Europe,” he said.

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