LUXEMBOURG (Reuters) – Germany warned on Tuesday of a repeat of the
chaotic influx of migrants that caught the European Union unprepared in
2015, as Greece and Cyprus sounded the alarm over a resurgence of
arrivals from neighboring Turkey.
EU ministers met to discuss migration as Greece has again become the
main gateway to Europe for people fleeing wars and poverty in the Middle
East, Asia and Africa, with U.N. data showing nearly 45,600 arrivals by
sea so far this year.
“If we leave all the countries on the EU’s external border (to fend
for themselves), there will never be a common European asylum policy,”
German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said.
“And if there is no common European asylum policy, there is a danger
that uncontrolled immigration will once again take place, throughout
Europe. We have seen this before and I do not want it to happen again,”
he told reporters in Luxembourg.
The bloc is wary of any recurrence of the 2015 crisis that sowed
bitter divisions among EU states, strained social and security services
and fueled support for populist, anti-immigration, eurosceptic and
far-right parties.
Greece saw the highest monthly arrival numbers in August since the
2016 EU-Turkey deal that greatly reduced sea crossings there, according
to a document – seen by Reuters – prepared by Finland, which currently
holds the bloc’s rotating presidency.
Turkey has long complained that the EU support promised in exchange
for keeping a lid on migration to Europe is inadequate given that it now
hosts around 3.5 million Syrian refugees.
The pressure on overcrowded migrant camps on Greece’s Aegean islands
is rising anew. Charity group Oxfam said over 13,000 men, women and
children were now crammed into the Moria camp on Lesbos that was
designed to accommodate 3,100 people.
“The situation of children in the Moria camp is particularly
worrying,” Oxfam said in a statement, stressing that many of those
under-age were on their own.
Though the deal with Turkey helped contain the 2015 crisis, rights
groups condemned it for undercutting international humanitarian law on
providing safe haven for refugees, and aggravating the suffering of
those already in distress.
In return for Turkish help, the EU pledged 6 billion euros on refugee
projects in Turkey. The EU says the money has since been delivered, but
Ankara disputes this and has asked for more.
“The situation in the Eastern Mediterranean is worrying,” the bloc’s
top migration official, Dmitris Avramopoulos, said after Tuesday’s
meeting.
EU leaders will discuss Turkey at a summit in Brussels on Oct.17-18,
including what they say is Ankaras’s “illegal drilling” for gas and oil
off the coast of Cyprus. Several diplomatic sources said the bloc would
mull raising more funds for refugees in Turkey.
UNDER PRESSURE
Spain has received the second highest number of seaborne migrants
this year with nearly 30,000, followed by Italy at nearly 8,000, Malta
at close to 1,600 and Cyprus at about 800, according to United Nations
data.
Relative to population size, however, Cyprus is currently under the heaviest pressure, according to the Finnish note.
Cyprus, Greece and Bulgaria said in a separate document at the
ministerial meeting, which was also seen by Reuters, that the situation
bore “alarming elements of an emerging crisis”.
“Europe cannot be caught unprepared for a second time… The EU will
have to consider positively the allocation of further funds to those
countries of the broader region of the Eastern Mediterranean route
affected by immense migratory flows.”
Rome and Valletta sought in vain to enrol on Tuesday more EU peers in
a migrant relocation scheme they agreed with France and Germany last
month for migrants rescued at sea while attempting to cross from north
Africa.
The plan was largely seen as a political gesture toward Italian Prime
Minister Giuseppe Conte, who adopted a more EU-friendly tone after the
ouster of the staunchly anti-immigrant Matteo Salvini and the formation
of a new coalition in Rome.
Seehofer has said Germany could take in a quarter of migrants who
reach Italy by sea. Rescue boats have repeatedly been stranded in the
sea for weeks this summer as EU states quarreled over who should host
those onboard.
The refusal of Hungary, Poland and their ex-communist peers on the
eastern flank of the EU to help the “front-line”, Mediterranean member
states by hosting some migrants has eroded the bloc’s unity since 2015.https://www.oann.com/germany-warns-of-repeat-of-2015-eu-migration-chaos/