Oman Daily Observer

Austria mulls EU military help for border control

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VIENNA: Austria proposed on Thursday using European Union armed forces to support the bloc’s border guards in barring undocument­ed migrants, as Vienna’s conservati­ve-far right coalition seeks tougher control of EU land and sea frontiers.

Defence Minister Mario Kunasek outlined his plan, based on Austria’s past use of soldiers at its borders, to his EU counterpar­ts at a closeddoor meeting in Vienna, stressing that soldiers would be under police control, diplomats said.

“We have got to protect our borders effectivel­y,” Kunasek told reporters after the meeting, saying there was a “positive discussion” on the proposal.

Several EU government­s separately expressed concern, reflecting divisions among member states on how to handle migration, resettle refugees within the bloc and prevent further waves of arrivals.

But Austria — the new chair of the EU’S six-month rotating presidency — is determined to push the bloc to prevent any repeat of the 2015 crisis when more than a million migrants arrived in Europe from North Africa and the Middle East.

Italy and Hungary have also fiercely rejected the EU’S current migration policy, respective­ly ordering ports closed to most migrant arrivals by sea and building a border wall.

The proposal to put the military at the service of the EU’S Frontex border agency follows an Austrian drill in June, overseen by the country’s farright interior minister, which enacted the arrival of hundreds of migrants and involved Black Hawk helicopter­s and soldiers.

The EU already has a naval mission in the Mediterran­ean which goes after people trafficker­s. On land, however, efforts to deepen military, police and civilian border cooperatio­n have not progressed, despite a declaratio­n to do so by more than a dozen countries in central and southeaste­rn Europe in 2017. Germany and Estonia were among the doubters on the Austrian plan. “There are very few ways that the military, even theoretica­lly, can be used in border areas,” Estonia’s Defence Minister Juri Luik said.

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