Viet Nam News

EU parliament adopts asylum reforms

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The EU parliament has adopted a sweeping reform of Europe's asylum policies that will both harden border procedures and force all the bloc's 27 nations to share responsibi­lity.

The parliament's main political groups overcame opposition from far-right and farleft parties to pass the new migration and asylum pact – enshrining a difficult overhaul nearly a decade in the making.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen hailed the vote on Wednesday, saying it will "secure European borders... while ensuring the protection of the fundamenta­l rights" of migrants.

"We must be the ones to decide who comes to the European Union and under what circumstan­ces, and not the smugglers and trafficker­s," she said.

EU government­s – a majority of which previously approved the pact – also welcomed its adoption.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Greece's migration minister, Dimitris Kairidis, both called it "historic".

French President Emmanuel Macron said Europe was acting "effectivel­y and humanely" while Italian Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi hailed what he termed "the best possible compromise".

But there was dissent when Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban derided the reform as "another nail in the coffin of the European Union".

"Unity is dead, secure borders are no more. Hungary will never give in to the mass migration frenzy! We need a change in Brussels in order to Stopmigrat­ion!" Orban said in a post on social media platform X.

For very different reasons, migrant charities also slammed the pact, which includes building border centres to hold asylum-seekers and sending some to outside "safe" countries.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said the EU was "shamefully" backing a deal "they know will lead to greater human suffering" while the Red Cross federation urged member states "to guarantee humane conditions for asylum seekers and migrants affected".

The vote itself was initially disrupted by protesters yelling: "The pact kills – vote no!", while dozens of demonstrat­ors outside the parliament building in Brussels held up placards with slogans decrying the reform.

The parliament's far-left grouping, which maintains that the reforms are incompatib­le with Europe's commitment to upholding human rights, said it was a "dark day".

It was "a pact with the devil," said Damien Careme, a lawmaker from the Greens group.

Border centres

As well as Orban, other far-right lawmakers also opposed the passage of the 10 laws making up the pact as insufficie­nt to stop irregular migrants they accuse of spreading insecurity and threatenin­g to "submerge" European identity.

Marine Le Pen, the figurehead of France's far-right National Rally, complained the changes would give "legal impunity to NGOS complicit with smugglers".

She and her party's leader who sits in the European Parliament, Jordan Bardella, said they would seek to overturn the reform after EU elections in June, which are tipped to boost far-right numbers in the legislatur­e.

The pact's measures are due to come into force in 2026, after the European Commission first sets out how it would be implemente­d.

New border centres would hold irregular migrants while their asylum requests are vetted. And deportatio­ns of those deemed inadmissib­le would be sped up.

The pact also requires EU countries to take in thousands of asylum-seekers from "frontline" states such as Italy and Greece, or – if they refuse – to provide money or

other resources to the under-pressure nations. Even ahead of Orban's broadside, his anti-immigratio­n government reaffirmed Hungary would not be taking in any asylum-seekers.

"This new migration pact practicall­y gives the green light to illegal migration to Europe," Hungary's Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said before the vote, adding that Budapest "will not allow illegal migrants to set foot here in Hungary".

EU 'solidarity'

German's Scholz said on X that the accord stands for "solidarity among European states" and would "finally relieve the burden on those countries that are particular­ly hard hit".

One measure particular­ly criticised by migrant charities is the sending of asylum-seekers to countries outside the EU deemed "safe", if the migrant has sufficient ties to that country.

The pact resulted from years of arduous negotiatio­ns spurred by a massive inflow of irregular migrants in 2015, many from wartorn Syria and Afghanista­n.

Under current EU rules, the arrival country bears responsibi­lity for hosting and vetting asylum-seekers and returning those deemed inadmissib­le. That has put southern frontline states under pressure and fuelled far-right opposition.

 ?? AFP/VNA Photo ?? Rescued refugees and migrants stand on a boat at the town of Paleochora, southweste­rn Crete, in November 2022.
AFP/VNA Photo Rescued refugees and migrants stand on a boat at the town of Paleochora, southweste­rn Crete, in November 2022.

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