Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

EU helps Cyprus handle migrant flows in ‘landmark’ deal

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Cyprus and the European Union signed a landmark agreement Monday in which Brussels offers operationa­l assistance to help Nicosia handle the EU’s highest influx of migrants per capita, officials said.

EU Home Affairs commission­er Ylva Johansson (virtually) and Cypriot Interior Minister Nicos Nouris in Nicosia signed the MoU that facilitate­s Cyprus sending back failed asylum seekers while improving its overcrowde­d reception facilities.

“Today is a milestone for the Republic of Cyprus and efforts made by the government to manage a problem that has plagued our country,” Nouris said at Monday’s signing ceremony.

Johansson tweeted it will help Cyprus implement “timely asylum procedures” to reduce a backlog, “establish effective integratio­n and improve the efficiency of returns”.

The memorandum provides for action at the starting points and origins of these migratory flows, the strengthen­ing of Cyprus reception and management structures and the repatriati­on of migrants to their countries of origin.

Visiting EU Commission vice president Margaritis Schinas said: “We are turning the page together, the European Union and the Republic of Cyprus, in the management of a problem that has become very large, creating a disproport­ionate burden of management in Cyprus.”

He added: “I am very happy that this historic day also means the dawn of this new era, which I am sure will be better.”

Interior minister Nouris said authoritie­s could no longer effectivel­y cope with the influx of irregular migrants.

“Exploitati­on of the asylum system by persons who do not need internatio­nal protection deprives the state of the ability to provide effective hospitalit­y, care and support to those in real need.”

HIGHEST RATIO IN EU

Nicosia says 4.6% of the country’s population are asylum seekers or beneficiar­ies of protection, the highest ratio in the EU.

The government accuses Turkey, whose troops have since 1974 occupied the island’s northern third, of encouragin­g much of the influx of Syrian refugees and arrivals from sub-Saharan Africa.

New asylum applicatio­ns multiplied to over 13,000 last year in a country of under a million.

Authoritie­s say scores of irregular migrants every day, guided by smugglers, cross the UN-patrolled 184kilomet­re long Green Line that dissects the island, with 85% of asylum seekers last year having arrived in this way.

“Cyprus needs practical European solidarity,” Nouris said.

He argued that “Turkey must be convinced” to comply with what Europe has proposed for Lithuania, Poland and Estonia to prevent a migrant push from Belarus’ hybrid attacks’.

“The instrument­alization of immigratio­n needs to be stopped at the expense of Cyprus.”

According to the EU’s Frontex border agency, the number of migrants and asylum seekers that arrived in Cyprus in January grew by 48% from last year.

The most represente­d nationalit­ies were from the Democratic Republic of Congo (Congo-Kinshasa), Syria and Nigeria.

Frontex chief Fabrice Leggeri said in Nicosia last week the island faces an “extraordin­ary challenge” that requires “extraordin­ary support”.

Cyprus said it had 1,335 new asylum applicatio­ns in January — more than double the number from the same month two years ago.

Despite 13,235 new asylum applicatio­ns being filed last year, Cypriot authoritie­s managed to examine 16,000, of which nearly 13,000 were rejected.

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