The Southland Times

EU leaders to hold emergency talks on migrant crisis

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Leaders from a group of European Union countries, led by Germany and France, will hold an emergency summit this weekend to thrash out possible solutions to a divisive row over migrants.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose government is in crisis over the management of migrant arrivals, is expected to join the leaders of Austria, Belgium, France, Greece, Italy, Malta, the Netherland­s and Spain for ‘‘informal talks’’ at European Commission headquarte­rs in Brussels on Sunday, Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said yesterday.

The United Nations refugee agency estimates that around 40,000 people have arrived in Europe by sea so far this year, around half the number who had entered at this time in 2017. But even though arrivals are declining, the unity of the 28-nation bloc is being torn apart by a crisis of confidence.

Most migrants land in Italy and Greece, and those countries feel abandoned by their EU partners. Member states like Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia are unwilling to share the burden and refuse to accept refugee quotas.

The commission said Sunday’s meeting, just days before a full EU summit, was aimed at ‘‘finding European solutions’’ to the migrant challenge.

Tougher checks at train and bus stations are among the actions participat­ing countries are considerin­g as part of efforts to stop asylum seekers from travelling freely across Europe’s open borders.

The proposal is part of a draft agreement being circulated ahead of the meeting. German newspaper Suedeutsch­e Zeitung said the draft also proposed penalties for asylum seekers who don’t Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz

remain in the first EU country where they are registered.

German business newspaper Handelsbla­tt said the proposed agreement also foresaw a significan­t expansion of the EU’s border control force, Frontex, and the creation of an asylum processing agency for the entire bloc.

Merkel wants an EU-wide agreement on how to deal with migrants, to avoid the chaos seen during the 2015 influx.

Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, whose country takes over the EU’s rotating presidency on July 1, said the gathering ‘‘is not about German domestic politics, it’s about a solution of the migration question that is long overdue’’.

Kurz said it would address issues like ‘‘how we protect the (EU) external borders, how do we prevent waving (migrants) through to central Europe’’.

Efforts to reform the EU’s asylum laws have run for two years without success, blocked mostly over the issue of which country should take responsibi­lity for migrants and refugees and for how long.

Juncker said that if these laws had been overhauled earlier, ‘‘we wouldn’t find ourselves confronted with the problem that we face today’’.

More than 1 million migrants entered Europe in 2015, most fleeing war in Syria and Iraq, overwhelmi­ng Greece and Italy and exposing glaring weaknesses in asylum laws and reception capacities.

But Turkey has taken in more refugees than the world’s biggest trading bloc, while Lebanon and Jordan together house some 2 million people.

‘‘We do not have a crisis of numbers. We continue to have a crisis of political will,’’ UN High Commission­er for Refugees Europe chief Sophie Magennis said. – AP

 ?? AP ?? Migrants from Pakistan eat lunch in front of a railway station in Sarajevo, Bosnia this week. Although migrant arrivals in Europe are declining, the bloc is bitterly divided over how to deal with them.
AP Migrants from Pakistan eat lunch in front of a railway station in Sarajevo, Bosnia this week. Although migrant arrivals in Europe are declining, the bloc is bitterly divided over how to deal with them.

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