The Borneo Post

EU interior ministers meet over migrant response

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INNSBRUCK, Austria: Interior ministers from 28 European nations met Thursday as they face intensifyi­ng pressure to introduce new policies to stem migrant arrivals, in their first meeting after Austria took the EU helm with promises of a tough response to the issue.

The meeting in Innsbruck will focus in particular on coming up with a common migration plan, with Austria expected to push to change the EU’s migration policy so it is no longer possible to make asylum requests on European soil.

Although the number of migrants fleeing war and poverty has fallen sharply since a 2015 peak the issue is a thorny one in Europe and a key topic for the six-month presidency of Austria, where a conservati­vefar right coalition took power last December.

Austria’s hardline interior minister Herbert Kickl, of the far- right FPOE party, told journalist­s earlier this week that he would propose asylum requests be made in refugee camps outside Europe to “a sort of mobile commission”.

Only exiles from countries that directly border the European Union would be able to make their asylum requests on EU territory.

Kickl is likely to join forces with his Italian counterpar­t Matteo Salvini, also deputy prime minister and leader of the farright League party.

Salvini has banned NGO rescue boats that pick up migrants in the Mediterran­ean from docking in Italy, accusing them of aiding human trafficker­s to bring migrants to Europe.

In Innsbruck, which has been described as an informal meeting, he is expected to ask nations not to send ships on internatio­nal missions to Italian ports.

The issue of migration and asylum rights in Europe has raised tensions among the EU’s 28 member states.

Austria currently holds the rotating EU presidency, which gives it the opportunit­y to chair meetings and set agendas.

Germany’s interior minister Horst Seehofer said Wednesday he hopes to reach an agreement with Italy by the end of the month on the vexed topic of returning migrants there from Germany.

A migrant deal with Rome is central to the compromise German Chancellor Angela Merkel reached with Seehofer to end a row over immigratio­n within their coalition that has threatened to bring down the government.

Salvini said he and Seehofer shared a ‘common objective: fewer landings, fewer deaths, fewer migrants in Italy as well as in Germany’.

But the Italian minister said he expected to see more action to toughen the EU’s external frontiers before agreeing to any deal to take back migrants.

Kickl told the European Parliament on Monday that the Innsbruck meeting would be the first time “we will talk more concretely about the issue of disembarka­tion platforms” outside the EU for migrants rescued in internatio­nal waters.

But European nations are divided on the feasibilit­y and legality of these ‘platforms’, which several countries like Morocco and Tunisia have already said they would not host. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Kickl is seen on a giant screen while speaking during a round of discussion­s as part of an informal meeting that focuses in particular on a common migration plan in Innsbruck, Austria. — AFP photo
Kickl is seen on a giant screen while speaking during a round of discussion­s as part of an informal meeting that focuses in particular on a common migration plan in Innsbruck, Austria. — AFP photo

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