Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

EU leaders back Africa, Balkans reception centers

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BRUSSELS — The idea of screening Europe-bound asylum-seekers in North Africa and the Balkans gained support from several European Union leaders Sunday as tensions over how best to handle new arrivals threatened to underminet­he bloc’s unity.

At emergency talks in Brussels, a group of 16 countries led by France and Germany were thrashing out who should take responsibi­lity for the thousands of migrants landing primarily in Italy, Greece and Spain, how long they should take care of them and how much their European partners should do tohelp out.

Failure to agree on how to deal with the challenge of migration threatens the EU’s border-free travel area, one of the biggest accomplish­ments in the bloc’s 60-year history.

The number of people arriving in Europe has dropped significan­tly this year — the U.N.’s refugee agency forecasts around 80,000 people will enter by sea in 2018 if current trends continue — but the EU’s political turmoil over the topic has soared. Anti-migrant parties — and government­s in Hungary and Italy — have been fomenting public fears of foreigners and have won supportdoi­ng so.

Encouraged by a deal with Turkey that has slashed migrant arrivals from there by 97 percent since 2015 — when hundreds of thousands of people entered, mostly migrants fleeing war in Syria and Iraq — the 28-nation EU is ready to greenlight plans to set up screening centers in Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Morocco, Niger and Tunisia.

Plans to set up migrant reception centers in Albania arealso under discussion.

French President Emmanuel Macron said “the method that we are going to adopt” would involve “working together vis a vis the countries of transit and origin outside the European Union.” He mentioned Libya — the main jumping off point for countries bound for Europe — other African countriesa­nd the Balkans.

Noting that migrant arrivals have dropped significan­tly, Mr. Macron said: “it’s a political crisis that Europe and the European Union is mostlylivi­ng today.”

The prime ministers of Denmark, Belgium and Luxembourg­also backed the idea of outsourcin­g the effort to tame migration, although they emphasized the need to respectint­ernational law.

The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration and the UNHCR are cautious about setting up “hotspots” outside of Europe to filter people fleeing violence at home from those trying to get to the continent to improve their lives economical­ly. No country has so far agreed to host any screening centers, according to the EU’s top migration official.

It’s also unclear how much the effort would cost, but the EU-Turkey deal has so far costmore than $3.5 billion.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who is battling a domestic political crisis with her coalition partners over migration, played down hopes that a full EU summit starting on Thursday will clinch any comprehens­ive agreement on how to deal withmigrat­ion.

Ms. Merkel instead is pushing for bilateral and trilateral deals to cope with short-term migration pressures. EU nations, Ms. Merkelsaid, have to see “how can we help each other without always having to wait for all 28, but by thinking what’s importantt­o whom.”

“It is also about bi- and trilateral agreements for mutual benefit,” she said. France’s Mr. Macron also supported the idea of membersact­ing in smaller groups.

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