San Francisco Chronicle

EU leaders struggle to find consensus on immigratio­n

- By Raf Casert and Lorne Cook Raf Casert and Lorne Cook are Associated Press writers.

BRUSSELS — The leaders of 16 countries survived the “frank talk” of an emergency meeting on immigratio­n and emerged with a veneer of common purpose Sunday as the European Union enters a potentiall­y vital week for its unity.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the meeting produced “a lot of goodwill” to resolve difference­s over how to manage the refugees and economic migrants who are willing to risk their lives to reach Europe.

The leaders of several more countries joined Italy and France in endorsing the idea of setting up centers in Africa to screen potential asylum-seekers for eligibilit­y before they set out for another continent.

The talks were “frank and open,” but “we don’t have any concrete consequenc­es or conclusion­s,” Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said.

The prevailing honesty and benevolenc­e on display Sunday barely lower the stakes for a full EU summit opening Thursday. Four member countries in eastern Europe refused to take part in the meeting because of demands that they take in more asylum-seekers to ease the burden elsewhere.

New Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte presented a plan that argues existing EU asylum rules are obsolete and “paradoxica­l.” The current rules effectivel­y mean migrants only can apply for asylum in the country where they first arrive, usually Italy or Greece.

Conte said his 10-point proposal would be a “paradigm shift” in how Europe approaches migration and that he was “decidedly satisfied” with the outcome of Sunday’s meeting.

“We have given the right direction for the debate under way. We’ll see each other Thursday,” he said.

Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron held out little hope they would be able to gather all 28 nations behind a single immigratio­n plan at the upcoming summit.

Merkel, who is battling a domestic political crisis with her coalition partners over immigratio­n, said she is seeking “bilateral and trilateral” deals to cope with short-term immigratio­n pressures.

EU nations, she said, have to see “how can we help each other without always having to wait for all 28, but by thinking what’s important to whom.”

The idea of prescreeni­ng Europe-bound asylum-seekers in North Africa gained support from several leaders amid the escalating tensions that threaten to undermine EU cohesion.

Paradoxica­lly, the EU’s immigratio­n policies are receiving renewed attention as the number of newcomers reaching Europe has dropped significan­tly.

The U.N.’s refugee agency forecasts that around 80,000 people will arrive to Europe by sea in 2018 if current trends continue — but the EU’s political turmoil over the topic has soared.

Anti-immigrant parties — and government­s in Hungary and Italy — have been fomenting public fears of foreigners and have won support doing so.

“Some are trying to use the situation in Europe to create political tension and to play with fear,” French President Emmanuel Macron said. “We must not give in. When someone has the right to protection and asylum, we should grant it.”

A failure to find agreement could threaten the EU’s border-free travel area, one of the biggest accomplish­ments of the bloc’s 60-year history.

Despite the different perspectiv­es, Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel said, “progress is possible on Thursday.”

Encouraged by a deal with Turkey that has slashed the number of people arriving from there by 97 percent since 2015, the EU appeared ready to green-light plans to set up screening centers in Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Morocco, Niger and Tunisia.

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

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 countries and the Balkans.

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

 ?? Yves Herman / AFP / Getty Images ?? Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte (left) confers with French President Emmanuel Macron in Brussels.
Yves Herman / AFP / Getty Images Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte (left) confers with French President Emmanuel Macron in Brussels.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States