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EU migration pact has already failed

- BERND RIEGERT — This article has been provided by Deutsche Welle

A group of eastern EU leaders has rejected the EU Commission’s new migration policy proposals. The carefully constructe­d plans to deal with asylum-seekers have collapsed before even being built. European Commission Vice President Margaritis Schinas likes to compare the EU’s proposed pact on migration and asylum to a house with three floors.

The first floor consists of agreements to “keep people, for a better life, in their countries.” The second floor contains the EU border and coast guard agency, well equipped to close off the EU’s borders as much as possible. And the third floor is focused on what Schinas describes as a “system of permanent, effective solidarity,” which would allow those asylum-seekers that neverthele­ss make it through to Europe to be distribute­d among the member states — either to be taken in by willing nations or for eventual deportatio­n.

But this delicately constructe­d new European asylum policy has once again been demolished with a crash by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, along with his Visegrad colleagues from Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Orban wants nothing to do with the third floor and its redistribu­tion of asylum-seekers within the EU, “return sponsorshi­ps” and “mandatory solidarity.” Sebastian Kurz, the anti-migration chancellor of neighborin­g Austria, also believes the word “solidarity” is wrong where asylum-seekers are concerned.

EU migration plan is unrealisti­c

In a matter of days, the Commission’s proposed migration pact, long in the making, is already not worth the paper it’s printed on. Schinas’ migration blueprints have been met with near-universal criticism. Lukewarm support has only come from Berlin, Rome and Paris, along with remarks that the proposal was a basis for negotiatio­n and a step in the right direction. But that direction remains undefined.

What’s clear, however, is that this proposal will not achieve anything — a view that is shared by many migration experts. The Commission’s plan is unrealisti­c, because the intransige­nt anti-immigratio­n forces in Eastern and Central Europe were always going to shoot it down in flames. Orban, Kurz and the rest want to completely seal off the borders to “irregular” migrants, and have called for all asylum-seekers to be sent across the EU’s external frontier. That would mean an end to any right to asylum, a fundamenta­l right which the EU has until now guaranteed and to which it has committed on the internatio­nal stage.

And now? We’ll likely, once again, see years of negotiatio­ns about the many individual details of the migration pact, only for all parties to admit in the end that no agreement can be reached. Faster asylum procedures and deportatio­ns of rejected asylum-seekers are already possible, as they’re already part of existing EU law. Why EU member states don’t make use of these laws, instead of keeping people detained on Greek islands or letting them drift in the Mediterran­ean somewhere between Libya and Italy, remains a mystery.

EU’s migrant deterrence strategy

This seeming reluctance to act must be part of some deceptive deterrence strategy. The EU seems to want to prove that conditions in the bloc are worse than in Turkey, Libya or Syria, so that asylum-seekers don’t decide to make the journey in the first place.

Even Ylva Johansson, the EU commission­er for home affairs responsibl­e for migration, has begun speaking of deterrence as the goal of the migration pact. Two-thirds of asylum-seekers have seen their applicatio­ns rejected and thus have to be sent back home, she has pointed out. That may sound good — but the problem is that many countries of origin refuse to take back their citizens. Sometimes it’s even impossible to determine where people came from in the first place, and people can end up going undergroun­d to avoid the authoritie­s. The number of people who actually end up being deported is unbelievab­ly low. There doesn’t appear to be any room in Schinas’ plan to deal with these problems. Maybe his house is missing a floor?

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