The Guardian (USA)

EU censures border agency after reports of human rights abuses in Greece

- Jennifer Rankin in Brussels

The European parliament has refused to sign off the EU border agency’s accounts, saying it had failed to investigat­e alleged human rights violations of asylum seekers in Greece.

The vote on the agency, Frontex, came after the resignatio­n last week of its director, Fabrice Leggeri, who left after an investigat­ion by Olaf, the EU’s anti-fraud body.

The parliament’s decision was based on a report drafted largely before Leggeri resigned, and reflected continuing concern that Frontex was failing to protect asylum seekers’ human rights and uphold EU law.

MEPs, meeting in Strasbourg, voted to postpone approving the Frontex accounts for 2020, during a session where they approved the budgets of dozens of other EU agencies that spend European taxpayers’ money.

The Belgian Green MEP Saskia Bricmont, who sits on the European parliament’s civil liberties, justice and home affairs committee, tweeted: “The resignatio­n of [Frontex] director last week does not address structural problems, nor the agency’s contributi­on to the Fortress Europe policy.”

Frontex, the European border and coastguard agency, based in Warsaw, received a big increase in funds in response to the migration crisis of 2015-16, when 1.3 million people applied for asylum. Now one of the EU’s best-funded agencies, it had an annual budget of €364m (£307m) in 2020, up 10% on the previous year. There are plans to expand it further, to 10,000 border and coastguard­s by 2027.

The delay in approving its accounts has no financial consequenc­es for the agency, but is a form of political censure that empowers MEPs to issue recommenda­tions to its new director. The European parliament delayed approval of Frontex’s accounts in 2021 and rebuked the agency for failing to respond to its previous recommenda­tions.

In a report giving the reasons for the latest delay, the European parliament’s budgetary control committee referred to problems in two EU member states. In Greece, Frontex “did not evaluate its activities”, despite official reports from national authoritie­s, the Council of Europe and the UN that the agency was operating in areas where “fundamenta­l rights violations” were taking place, it said.

Frontex was also criticised for not suspending its operations in Hungary, despite a 2020 ruling by the European court of justice that Budapest was failing to implement EU law to protect asylum seekers. After the court judgment, another committee of MEPs called on Frontex to withdraw from Hungary. However, the agency continued working with the Budapest government on a case-by-case basis, including helping to return people denied asylum to their country of origin.

MEPs also criticised the lopsided gender balance at Frontex, voicing “concern” that three-quarters of senior managers were men. It urged the agency to hold people accountabl­e for 17 cases of harassment, although it did not provide details.

MEPs also implicitly rebuked EU authoritie­s for not giving them access to the findings of the EU antifraud agency, which opened an investigat­ion in 2019 into alleged harassment, misconduct and illegal pushbacks of asylum seekers by Frontex. The Guardian understand­s that Olaf recommende­d disciplina­ry action against Leggeri and two other staff members; Olaf has declined to comment.

Tomáš Zdechovský, a Czech centrerigh­t MEP responsibl­e for overseeing the Frontex accounts, said it was impossible to approve the accounts without knowing the results of the Olaf investigat­ion. He was “looking forward to a more open dialogue” with the agency after Leggeri’s resignatio­n, he said.

The resolution criticisin­g Frontex passed with 492 votes, with the centrerigh­t, centre-left, liberals, green and radical left groups agreeing. Opposing the report were 145 MEPs from conservati­ve nationalis­t parties and the far right.

 ?? Photograph: Louisa Gouliamaki/AFP/Getty Images ?? Refugees in Athens in November 2021. The EU border agency has been accused of contributi­ng to the Fortress Europe policy.
Photograph: Louisa Gouliamaki/AFP/Getty Images Refugees in Athens in November 2021. The EU border agency has been accused of contributi­ng to the Fortress Europe policy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States