Los Angeles Times

Joint effort on migrants urged

In Europe, ‘nearly everyone has at one time been a refugee,’ an EU leader says.

- By Laura King laura.king@latimes.com Twitter: @laurakingL­AT

BERLIN — Passionate­ly defending the right of asylum for those f leeing war and persecutio­n, the head of the European Union’s executive arm on Wednesday urged member states to divide 160,000 refugees among themselves and to enact broad reforms governing mass entry to the continent.

Europe this year is weathering one of the greatest human displaceme­nts it has seen since World War II, with its countries sharply divided over how to cope with the wave of arrivals. Thousands of migrants and refugees are on the move, following an overland route that stretches from Greece to northern Europe, punctuated by many wretched way stations.

Tiny Greek tourist islands have been overwhelme­d by the crush of those making the sea voyage from Turkey, and scenes of desperatio­n unfold daily at choke points such as Hungary’s border with Serbia.

“It is high time to act to manage the refugee crisis, because there is no alternativ­e,” European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker told EU lawmakers in Strasbourg, France, in comments meant to spur action at a meeting Monday of the bloc’s interior ministers in Brussels.

Reviving a proposal from May to distribute 40,000 migrants and refugees who landed in Greece and Italy, Juncker also called for the placing of 120,000 others who arrived in those countries or crossed the EU’s external border at the Hungarian frontier.

The plan would mark the bloc’s most ambitious effort yet to confront the migrant crisis. However, even if endorsed, it would make only a relatively small dent in the numbers of asylum seekers arriving in Europe. Poorer eastern countries such as Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic have been resistant to settlement quotas meant to spread the burden among EU member states.

In appealing for Europewide cooperatio­n, Juncker invoked centuries of turbulent history on the continent and declared that fundamenta­l values were at stake in dealing with the migrant wave.

“We have the means to help those fleeing from war, terror, oppression,” he told EU lawmakers. “We, all of us, should remember that Europe is a continent where nearly everyone has at one time been a refugee.”

Germany, with the continent’s most powerful economy, has been the most welcoming of new arrivals, forecastin­g that it will receive more than 800,000 this year. About 20,000 arrived just over the last weekend.

However, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Wednesday that asylum seekers must make a strong case for remaining in the country.

“Those who are not fleeing political persecutio­n or war, but are coming to us out of economic need, will not be able to stay,” she told the parliament.

 ?? Christian Lutz
Associated Press ?? EUROPEAN Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, called on EU countries to share 160,000 refugees.
Christian Lutz Associated Press EUROPEAN Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, called on EU countries to share 160,000 refugees.

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