Scottish Daily Mail

Merkel given 2 weeks to solve her migrant crisis

...or we’ll shut the borders say leader’s coalition allies

- By Mario Ledwith Brussels Correspond­ent

‘Negative domino effects’

ANGELA Merkel was yesterday given a two-week ultimatum to reach an EU immigratio­n deal and avoid a rebellion within her coalition government.

The German leader’s Bavarian sister party (the CSU) had warned it would press ahead with plans to close the borders if no solution was found to cutting immigratio­n.

Now the CSU says it will allow her to try to seek deals with other EU countries instead. However party leader Horst Seehofer insisted on a hard-line ‘immigratio­n masterplan’ if she fails.

‘We wish the chancellor success in this,’ he said. ‘But we stand by our position that, if this does not succeed, turning people back immediatel­y at the border must be possible.’

Under Mr Seehofer’s proposals, officials would be handed the power to turn away migrants who have registered for asylum elsewhere in Europe or do not hold valid identity papers.

His plans were rejected by Mrs Merkel last week. She fears that unilateral action by Berlin could stir tensions with neighbouri­ng countries.

But speaking in Munich after emergency talks over the weekend, Mr Seehofer said the chancellor now agreed to ‘62-and-a-half’ of the 63 proposals included in his reform package.

In a thinly-veiled criticism of Mrs Merkel’s open-door immigratio­n policy, he said his Bavarian party was not behind ‘many decisions that divided Europe’.

The CSU has clashed with Mrs Merkel’s Christian Democrats over the policy, saying it adversely affected Bavaria.

Mrs Merkel insisted that there would be ‘no automatism’ regarding rejections at the border even if she did not find a deal with other EU leaders before a summit this month.

‘Turning away migrants at our borders at the heart of Europe will lead to negative domino effects that could hurt Germany, and put into question European unity,’ she added.

Dampening CSU claims that it could eventually push ahead with its proposals regardless, Mrs Merkel insisted she was ultimately in charge of government policies. She did however promise that those asylum seekers who have already been rejected would not be allowed to re-enter Germany.

She is due to discuss the matter with French president Emmanuel Macron today.

European countries are locked in a war of words over how to overhaul their approach to immigratio­n and are on heightened alert after Italy’s new government rejected a rescue boat last week. Hungary and Poland have insisted that countries should be responsibl­e for their own response, rejecting Mrs Merkel’s hopes for a Europe-wide solution.

While the number of arrivals in Germany has fallen, hardliners fear that a further surge could deepen divisions exposed by the 2015 immigratio­n crisis.

Critics have blamed the chancellor’s border strategy for fuelling the recent surge in popularity of the far Right, which entered parliament last year and is now the opposition.

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