The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Slovenia toughens border ahead of EU migrant summit

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LJUBLJANA: Slovenia said Tuesday it will build ‘obstacles’ on its border with Croatia, in a move that German Chancellor Angela Merkel said highlighte­d the urgency for the EU to stem the migrant influx on the eve of a summit in Malta.

Slovenian Prime Minister Miro Cerar, whose country last month suddenly found itself on the main Balkan route for migrants and refugees bound for northern Europe, said however that the frontier with Croatia would not be closed.

“We decided yesterday to start building over the following days on the Schengen (zone) border with Croatia some temporary technical obstacles,” Cerar told reporters.

“These obstacles, including fences if needed, will have the objective of directing migrants towards the border crossings. We are not closing our borders.”

Slovenia, which unlike fellow EU member Croatia is part of Europe’s passport-free Schengen zone, has struggled with the passage of over 170,000 migrants since mid-October, when Hungary closed its border with Croatia.

They are just some of the approximat­ely 800,000 arrivals to have reached European shores so far this year.

Cerar said that the measures were aimed at avoiding a ‘humanitari­an disaster’ caused by an expected sharp rise in migrant numbers this week following a recent dip.

He also said Austria — the next country along on the migrant trail — was planning to restrict the daily number of new arrivals to 6,000, creating a backlog in Slovenia.

“With the winter coming and temperatur­es dropping, we could face a catastroph­e if we do not act at the right time,” he said.

Austria, which has received a record 70,000 asylum claims so far this year, has not announced that it will limit the number of migrant entries.

But its squabbling coalition government is expected to discuss on Wednesday similar measures to Slovenia, reports said.

With the continent facing its biggest migration crisis since World War II, EU states have bickered for months on how to stem the flow and share out the new arrivals, driving a wedge between western and eastern members.

Hungary’s hardline Prime Minister Victor Orban, a hardliner on migration, offered Slovenia his support.

“Many countries in Europe would like to swap with Hungary now, many countries would like to be such a country which recognised in time the nature and scale of the danger of illegal immigratio­n,” he said.

Slovenia’s Cerar hit out at the rest of the European Union for failing to stop the flow of hundreds of thousands of migrants, many fleeing violence in Syria, Iraq and Afghanista­n.

The “commitment­s from Brussels... are not being fulfilled,” he said.

The crisis threatens to undermine the freedom of movement enshrined in the EU, seen as one of the bloc’s most cherished achievemen­ts, and has also boosted populist parties across Europe. — AFP

We decided yesterday to start building over the following days on the Schengen (zone) border with Croatia some temporary technical obstacles.

Miro Cera, Slovenian Prime Minister

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 ??  ?? A slovenian soldier is at work to build obstacles on the Slovenian-Croatian border in Sela pri Dobovi near Brezice. — AFP photo
A slovenian soldier is at work to build obstacles on the Slovenian-Croatian border in Sela pri Dobovi near Brezice. — AFP photo

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