The Manila Times

EU countries present united front on migration

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ROME: The heads of seven southern European states pledged on Wednesday (Thursday in Manila) to up their efforts to tackle one of the most stubborn thorns in the EU’s side: flows of migrants from war-torn and impoverish­ed countries.

The leaders of Cyprus, France, Greece, Italy, Malta, Portugal and Spain, meeting in Rome for a working dinner, released a statement saying they were “firmly committed to a common European policy on migration.”

The “Southern Seven” tackled issues such as the future of the eurozone and efforts to propel growth, but from crowded reception centers in Greece to boats heading for Spain, the top topic was migrants.

Those on the frontline for arrivals despair of the reluctance of some European countries— such as Poland or the Czech Republic—to share the reception burden.

“We must fight together to put in place a migration policy that shows solidarity with the countries that receive these significan­t flows,” Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras told the press.

France’s President Emmanuel Macron also slammed the “inconsiste­ncies” in Europe’s Dublin asylum rules which force those countries which serve as points of arrival in Europe to shoulder the crisis.

The call for a “determined effort” to improve the system however steered clear of mentioning the EU bid to relocate migrants—a bid that has angered some countries or been flatly ignored.

For Italy, 2017 was a turning point: the country went from large- scale arrivals in the first six months to a sharp dropoff, thanks to controvers­ial agreements in Libya.

Some 119,000 people landed in Italy last year, down 35 percent on 2016.

Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni boasted of the “encouragin­g results in the control of (migrant) flows and the fight against human traffickin­g” and urged Europe to make sure the results would “now be consolidat­ed.”

For its part, Spain saw a notable increase in Algerians and Moroccans sailing in, from 6,000 attempting the crossing in 2016 to nearly 23,000 picked up last year.

In Greece, an accord struck between the EU and Turkey limited the number of arrivals to 28,800—six times fewer than in 2016—but it did not solve the problem of caring for those who had already made the journey.

The toll of dead or missing in the Mediterran­ean dropped from nearly 5,000 during crossings in 2016 to 3,116 in 2017, mostly off the coast of Libya.

But the start of 2018 has seen some grim statistics.

Between 90 and 100 migrants were missing after their makeshift boat sank off Libya, the country’s navy said late Tuesday. Ten migrants also died last weekend and dozens more are missing after their boat sank.

But apart from rescues at sea, asylum applicatio­ns— and the inevitable delays and lengthy appeals— have placed great strain on some countries.

Greece is struggling to deal with more than 50,000 migrants and refugees, 14,000 of whom are crammed into tents or centers on overcrowde­d Aegean islands.

In Italy, the authoritie­s have stopped providing details on the number of asylum seekers housed in its reception centers, with the last available figures showing there were nearly 200,000 last spring.

Spain has faced a backlash over the state of the detention centers where migrants are held before being expelled. AFP

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