Dayton Daily News

Concern grows about border measures threatenin­g travel

- By Lorne Cook

The future of ID-check free travel across 26 European countries is at risk if government­s do not ease soon the emergency bor- der restrictio­ns they intro- duced to halt the spread of the coronaviru­s, European Union lawmakers and offi- cials warned.

As the virus outbreaks expanded in Italy in February, the country’s neighbors imposed border measures to keep the disease out, with- out any consultati­on. Others then followed suit until almost half the members of the zone known as the Schengen area had reintroduc­ed controls of some kind.

Free movement is a jewel in Europe’s crown which helps business flourish by allowing goods and people to seamlessly cross borders. Schengen came under pres- sure as countries introduced measures after the arrival of more than 1 million migrants in 2015, and in response to a series of extremist attacks. Some countries have kept those controls in place.

“The risk we are facing seriously today is the death of Schengen,” Tanja Fajon, a leading EU lawmaker on the border measures, said. “It is in a very poor and problemati­c state. It has been hit years ago by the refugee crisis and the virus delivered another blow.”

“We have to restore free travel as soon as possible once the pandemic is over,” the lawmaker from Slovenia said, adding that countries need to quickly draw lessons about whether the “very chaotic, selfish and egotistica­l approach at the borders” early in Europe’s outbreak were worth it.

The EU’s executive arm, the European Commission, on Wednesday unveiled its guidelines for the 26 countries to lift any border restrictio­ns they have in place.

“The challenge which lies ahead of us is restore the integrity of the Schengen area,” said Monique Pariat, the commission’s director general of migration and home affairs. “The process will be complicate­d. Member states have introduced different measures in a very uncoordina­ted manner and unwinding these different national decisions will take some time.”

A serious challenge is that some Schengen members appear to be willing to lift controls only to people from countries that they consider to be safe from the virus or which might make up an important part of their tourism market. The EU insists that when a border between two countries opens, every resident should be allowed to cross, regardless of their nationalit­y.

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