Oman Daily Observer

Asylum rules: EU wants end to deadlock

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VALLETTA, Malta: The EU on Thursday urged member states meeting in Malta to break a long deadlock on sharing the burden of asylum-seekers as a new migrant crisis brewed in the central Mediterran­ean.

EU interior ministers were in Valletta debating ways to reform the so-called Dublin rules that have put the onus on overstretc­hed Greece and Italy to admit asylum-seekers landing in Europe in record numbers.

“I hope that today finally we shall find the common ground on solidarity,” EU migration commission­er Dimitris Avramopoul­os told reporters before entering the talks. “I think one and a half years is enough.”

Under the Dublin rules, would-be refugees must file for asylum in the first member state they enter, most often the Mediterran­ean nations of Greece and Italy.

If asylum-seekers have travelled on to other EU nations, they are to be returned to their first port of call.

German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said France and Germany have both presented proposals to break the deadlock but did not elaborate.

“I think it is now the time to achieve a compromise in the coming months,” de Maiziere said before entering the talks in Malta, which currently holds the six- month EU rotating presidency. Eastern European countries like Hun- gary, Slovakia and Poland have been among the most reluctant in the 28-nation bloc to admit asylum-seekers, suggesting they could help financiall­y instead.

The ministers were meeting after Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat warned the EU could face an “unpreceden­ted” flow of migrants in the spring across the central Mediterran­ean from Libya to Italy.

Smuggling on that route is picking up sharply with more than 180,000 migrants landing in Italy last year, compared with a previous annual record of 170,100 in 2014.

Slovak Interior Minister Robert Kalinak told reporters in Valletta: “I think all our focus in this year has to be put on the (central) Mediterran­ean route.”

An EU aid-for-cooperatio­n deal struck with Turkey last March has dramatical­ly reduced the numbers of asylum-seekers arriving in Greece, the previous main entry point for Europe.

EU officials say the vast majority of people travelling over the central Mediterran­ean are migrants in search of work rather than fleeing war and persecutio­n.

Those who fled to Greece were mainly refugees from Syria and other conflict-torn countries.

 ?? AFP ?? Dimitris Avramopoul­os (C) shares a light moment with Malta Minister for Home Affairs Carmelo Abela (L) and Slovakia’s Minister of Interior Robert Kalinak at the Grand Masters Palace in Valletta on Thursday.—
AFP Dimitris Avramopoul­os (C) shares a light moment with Malta Minister for Home Affairs Carmelo Abela (L) and Slovakia’s Minister of Interior Robert Kalinak at the Grand Masters Palace in Valletta on Thursday.—

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