Jamaica Gleaner

Summit yields new approach to asylum claims

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PARIS (AP): THE LEADERS of France, Germany, Italy, and Spain agreed yesterday on a new policy to grant asylum to vulnerable migrants who apply for protection while in Africa instead of their destinatio­n countries.

At a Europe-Africa summit in Paris aimed at finding longelusiv­e solutions to illegal migration, the European leaders also agreed to help the African countries through which Europe-bound migrants usually pass with border controls.

French President Emmanuel Macron, the summit’s host, called it the most effective and far-reaching migration meeting in months, though he didn’t say how much the new measures would cost and many specifics remained unclear.

In a joint statement, the four leaders acknowledg­ed the need to initiate a process in Chad and Niger that would lead to the resettleme­nt of “particular­ly vulnerable migrants” in Europe.

They announced the plan to

carry out “protection missions” in the African nations in cooperatio­n with the United Nations’ refugee and migration agencies.

The process would allow migrants to immigrate legally to Europe if they are on an eligibilit­y list provided by the

UN refugee agency and registered with authoritie­s in Niger and Chad.

The pre-asylum centres would receive European financing, according to a top French diplomat. The official, in keeping with French presidenti­al policy, requested anonymity and would not provide details on the precise locations and procedures for the missions.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that European countries must clearly define which asylum-seekers have legitimate humanitari­an needs and who is fleeing poverty. She called it “very, very important” that the possibilit­y of resettleme­nt is coupled “with an end to illegal migration.”

 ?? AP ?? Rescuers transfer African migrants to a rescue boat during a rescue operation from the Aquarius vessel of SOS Mediterran­ee NGO and MSF (Doctors Without Borders) in the sea some 25 nautical miles (29 miles, 46 kilometres) north of the Libyan coast, on...
AP Rescuers transfer African migrants to a rescue boat during a rescue operation from the Aquarius vessel of SOS Mediterran­ee NGO and MSF (Doctors Without Borders) in the sea some 25 nautical miles (29 miles, 46 kilometres) north of the Libyan coast, on...

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