The Daily Telegraph

No agreement on migration crisis at EU ‘mini-summit’

Merkel and Macron, losing backing at home, also fail to win support from 14 fellow European leaders

- By James Crisp in Brussels

ANGELA MERKEL and Emmanuel Macron, the European Union’s two most influentia­l leaders, met yesterday with their bitterly divided counterpar­ts for a frustratin­g “mini-summit” in Brussels, while facing plunging popularity at home.

The German chancellor, whose political future is under threat unless she can wrest deals from her opposite numbers in Europe, had already conceded the mini-summit of 16 nations would not bridge huge splits over migration policy ahead of a full European Council meeting next week.

Italy’s new hardline government has refused to admit foreign-flagged rescue ships packed with hundreds of migrants and pledged not to take in one more asylum seeker.

Yesterday in Brussels, Giuseppe Conte, the Italian prime minister, slapped the richer northern EU countries with a 10-point list of demands.

Rome called for migrant “protection centres” to be set up in several EU countries to relieve overcrowdi­ng in its facilities and demanded more aid for African countries that fight human traffickin­g.

It also called for countries refusing to take their share of migrants under a controvers­ial quota scheme to lose EU funding. The document warned that the future of the EU’S cherished passport-free Schengen zone was at stake.

Before the summit, Italy branded Mr Macron “public enemy number one” after the French president said there was no “crisis” of migration in Italy because migrant boat arrivals were down about 80 per cent compared to last year.

There has been a sharp decrease in migrant arrivals since their peak in 2015, when more than one million Syrians entered the bloc. EU cooperatio­n deals with Turkey and Libya, the main transit countries have sharply cut the flow of migrants. In Brussels, Mr Macron said “It’s a political crisis mainly now.”

Italy and Austria have joined the four Visegrad countries of Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and the Czech Republic, which boycotted the mini-summit, in attacking Brussels’ handling of the crisis. After the summit, Pedro Sanchez, the new Spanish prime minister said: “There have been no concrete consequenc­es,” though the leaders of Belgium and Malta said some progress could be possible at Thursday’s full 28-nation summit.

However, Mrs Merkel appeared resigned to pursuing bilateral migrant return agreements with individual countries rather than a common European solution. “Regarding the question: can we get bilateral and trilateral agreements in the coming days, this meeting is very important,” she said.

Germans are turning against Mrs Merkel’s warring conservati­ve union, which currently has its lowest approval rates since last November according to a poll published yesterday in Bild. The same poll showed that the far-right, anti-immigrant AFD reached its highest score ever, with 16 per cent.

Horst Seehofer, her interior minister and the leader of the CSU, has given her until the end of June to find a European deal to curb new arrivals. If that fails, he vowed to order border police to turn back migrants, which means Mrs Merkel would be forced to back him or sack him. If she sacks him, her government could fall.

Meanwhile, Mr Macron’s popularity in France hit a new low of 40 per cent after controvers­ies over spending at his residences, perceived elitism and cutting remarks on welfare benefits. The decline in popularity was particular­ly acute among France’s over-65s.

‘ [To] get bilateral and trilateral agreements in the coming days, this meeting is very important’

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