The Commercial Appeal

EU’S border chief offers resignatio­n

Move comes amid pushback allegation­s

- Frank Jordans and Samuel Petrequin

BRUSSELS – The head of the European Union’s border agency has offered to resign following allegation­s that the agency was involved in illegal pushbacks of migrants, European Union and German officials said Friday.

The board of the European Border and Coast Guard Agency, known as Frontex, is considerin­g whether to accept the offer from Frontex Executive Director Fabrice Leggeri, a German Interior Ministry spokespers­on said.

Pushbacks – forcing would-be refugees away from a border before they can reach a country and claim asylum – are considered violations of internatio­nal refugee protection agreements, which say people shouldn’t be expelled or returned to a country where their life and safety might be in danger due to their race, religion, nationalit­y or being members of a social or political group.

Leggeri has been under mounting pressure to resign for several months. Last year, the EU’S anti-fraud watchdog, OLAF, opened an investigat­ion into Frontex, over allegation­s of harassment, misconduct and migrant pushbacks. The director submitted his offer to resign a day after a media investigat­ion suggested that Frontex’s database recorded illegal pushbacks in the Aegean Sea as “prevention of departure” incidents.

Leggeri has previously denied wrongdoing.

“I can confirm that he has offered the board of Frontex his resignatio­n,” ministry spokespers­on Maximilian Kall told reporters in Berlin.

“It offers the possibilit­y of fully resolving the allegation­s, creating complete transparen­cy and ensuring that all missions by Frontex occur in full conformity with European law,” he said.

Frontex supervises the enforcemen­t of the EU’S external borders and those of countries that participat­e in Europe’s visa-free Schengen area. A spokespers­on for the EU’S executive commission, Eric Mamer, said it was up to the agency’s board “to assess the situation.”

Leggeri has led Frontex since January 2015, running the agency during the 2015 European migrant crisis, when well over 1 million people, many of them refugees fleeing war in Syria, began entering the bloc.

According to a joint investigat­ion this week by Lighthouse Reports, Der Spiegel, SRF Rundschau, Republik and Le Monde, the EU’S border agency has been involved in the pushbacks of at least 957 asylumseek­ers in the Aegean Sea between March 2020 and September 2021.

The European Court of Human Rights has held that undocument­ed migrants should be provided with informatio­n, care and have their asylum claims processed.

European lawmakers have asked for part of Frontex’s budget to be frozen until improvemen­ts are made, including setting up a mechanism for reporting serious incidents on the EU’S external borders and establishi­ng a system for monitoring fundamenta­l rights.

Birgit Sippel, a home affairs spokespers­on for the Socialists and Democrats grouping of the European Parliament, said Leggeri’s departure would be “a long overdue developmen­t, after years of constant allegation­s of pushbacks and violations of human rights.”

A German nongovernm­ental organizati­on, Pro Asyl, welcomed Leggeri’s offer to step down. Pro Asyl helps migrants seeking protection in Germany from war and persecutio­n.

“It’s scandalous that the director of an EU agency hid human rights abuses for years, manipulate­d evidence and lied to Parliament,” the head of the group’s Europe department, Karl Kopp, said in a statement.

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