Arab News

EU starts countdown to settle refugee quotas row by June

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SOFIA: EU ministers stuck Thursday to opposing east-west camps as they started a countdown to try and overhaul Europe’s asylum rules by June when the three-year-old migration crisis could flare anew.

The minister from Bulgaria, which holds the six-month rotating EU presidency ending June 30, said he would introduce proposals to “try to find a balance between the member states’” split over refugee quotas.

“Today we will see if we are on the right track or not,” Interior Minister Valentin Radev told reporters as he arrived for talks with his European Union counterpar­ts in the sub-zero temperatur­es of the snow-covered Bulgarian capital Sofia. of the so-called Dublin rules to create a permanent mechanism for all member states to admit refugees in the event of a new emergency.

June is when migrant flows across the Mediterran­ean tend to increase with the warmer weather.

Under existing rules, countries where migrants first arrive are required to process asylum requests, putting a heavy burden on Greece and Italy, the current main entry points to Europe.

Little, if any, progress has been made since talks on asylum reform began in 2016.

EU cooperatio­n deals with Turkey and Libya, the main transit countries, have helped to slow, at least for now, the flow of migrants to Europe since its 2015 peak.

But European Migration Commission­er Dimitris Avramopoul­os warned that the crisis could flare anew at many points along the EU’s external borders and all member states have to share the burden of admitting refugees.

“Let’s do something to get out of this stalemate, because it is not a real one,” Avramopoul­os told reporters on arrival, adding politician­s were addressing a “domestic audience” rather than broader interests.

“I think that what will prevail is the European spirit and a spirit of solidarity,” said Avramopoul­os, a former Greek foreign minister.

Avramopoul­os has said it is “unacceptab­le” for any states to refuse to take in refugees.

Eastern states argue they can meet their obligation­s instead by contributi­ng funds to overburden­ed Italy and Greece.

“The quota system didn’t work. It was not a good idea. We need to invent something new,” Slovak Interior Minister Robert Kalinak told reporters, backing the stand taken by Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic.

He said he wanted to study the Bulgarian proposals, whose details have not been revealed publicly.

Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn, who also handles migration, said it is not right for member states to let frontline countries assume the migrant burden.

“I hope that the countries which now reject (quotas) as well will come to the conclusion very, very soon that it cannot go on like this,” Asselborn said.

German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said it would be “diffcult” to reach a June deal on quotas and suggested concentrat­ing first on “easier” asylum reforms such as family reunificat­ion.

 ??  ?? A countdown has started to try and overhaul Europe's asylum rules by June when the three-year-old migration crisis could flare anew. Photo shows German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere, left, and Estonian Interior Minister Andres Anvelt. (AFP)
A countdown has started to try and overhaul Europe's asylum rules by June when the three-year-old migration crisis could flare anew. Photo shows German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere, left, and Estonian Interior Minister Andres Anvelt. (AFP)

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