EU tries to unblock refugee relocation deal
By JACOPO BARIGAZZI 9/21/15, 7:19 PM CET
Updated 9/21/15, 10:56 PM CET
EU countries are preparing to green-light a controversial
European Commission proposal to relocate 120,000 refugees across the continent,
but diplomatic sources said the deal will not impose mandatory criteria for how
many asylum-seekers each member state must accept.
Interior ministers from the EU’s 28
countries are preparing to hold an emergency meeting in Brussels Tuesday to approve the proposal,
which was left on the table after they failed to agree on it a week ago.
Diplomats spent most of the day Monday trying to break the impasse between
countries over whether the plan would set mandatory quotas for accepting
refugees.
Several eastern European countries remain
opposed to any plan that includes a requirement from Brussels to take in asylum-seekers. According
to one diplomat, the specific criteria for relocation have been taken out of
the agreement because many countries “are afraid they could be the basis for a
permanent relocation scheme.”
“Romania , the Czechs and the Slovak
are still the main opponents” — EU diplomat
The pressure to move on the refugee issue
will build throughout the week. On Wednesday, EU leaders will gather for an
emergency summit on the migration issue, and officials are hoping to have the
relocation dispute settled before then.
According to official sources, the
agreement now being considered would relocate the 120,000 refugees from Greece and Italy ,
but not from Hungary
as originally proposed by Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker in his State
of the Union speech earlier this month.
“We are reaching a deal, but Romania , the
Czechs and the Slovak are still the main opponents,” said one EU diplomat.
Leaders of Hungary ,
Poland , Slovakia and the Czech
Republic , the so-called Visegrad
group, met on Monday afternoon in Prague
to discuss “possible solutions” to the refugee crisis. According to a press
release issued by the Czech foreign ministry, the four countries were expected
to reiterate their opposition to compulsory quotas.
Front-line states
The scope of the problem was underlined
this week when the EU released new figures showing that more than 210,000
asylum-seekers applied for protection in the Union
in the second quarter of 2015. Those numbers do not take into account the
thousands of refugees now arriving daily at Europe ’s
borders.
Both of the Commission proposals now likely
to be left out of the new agreement — the inclusion of Hungary in the
relocation plan and the criteria for distributing refugees across member states
— have faced fierce resistance in recent weeks.
After changing its line several times, Hungary is now refusing to be considered as
front-line state for the arrival of refugees, along with Italy and Greece , and in draft conclusions
being worked on Monday by the Council it had been removed from the plan.
The original Commission proposal was to
relocate 54,000 migrants from Hungary ,
50,400 from Greece and
15,600 from Italy .
Diplomats now face two options for the 54,000 that would have come from Hungary : Either redistribute them between Italy and Greece , or keep them as a “reserve”
for further emergency situations. The latter option “is the most likely,” to be
agreed says an EU official involved in the discussions.
Diplomats have also discussed relocating
some or all of that “reserve” from transit states, such as Croatia , or destination states, such as Germany .
“Voluntary”
An earlier agreement on the Commission’s
proposal from May to relocate 40,000 refugees required a delicate compromise
making the target figure mandatory but the method for reaching it voluntary.
That less-ambitious agreement was finalized last week by ministers, but the
headline goal has still not been reached.
EU officials are trying to avoid a similar
problem on this larger plan. To sidestep the mandatory versus voluntary
problem, this time the number of refugees each country will take in will not be
imposed by the Commission but rather agreed by the various member states.
“It would not possible for a
member state to completely opt out of taking refugees”
“Numbers have been roughly agreed with each
member state, so [sovereignty] is safe,” the EU diplomat said.
“The fact that in many cases the number of
refugees to take in is very similar to the numbers proposed by the Commission
is a pure coincidence,” noted another EU diplomat.
Also still on the table: the “exceptional
circumstances” under which a member state can argue that it will not take part
in the relocation scheme. Ministers were still debating two different options
Monday afternoon: a member state could opt out of the plan by making a
“contribution” to a special EU fund of €6,500 for each refugee that is not
taken in; or a country could ask for a delay of up to six months for the
relocation plan to be fully implemented.
But it is not a real opt-out. In drafts
being circulated Monday and obtained by POLITICO, the delay option would
involve only “30 percent of applicants allocated,” meaning it would not
possible for a member state to completely opt out of taking refugees. France , Germany
and Italy
are reluctant to impose a monetary compensation plan, because they would like
to avoid the idea of paying a fee to avoid European solidarity, an EU official
said.
Many of the larger questions will have to
be dealt with over dinner Wednesday by EU heads of state and government. The
leaders will hold an “informal” summit to discuss how to tackle migration at
its roots, in Turkey and Syria , and how
to ensure control of the EU external borders.
How that conversation goes could depend on
what gets decided the day before.
Maïa de la Baume contributed to this
article.
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