Refugee crisis: anti-quota EU leaders
meet amid deadlock
Central and eastern European leaders
opposed to mandatory refugee sharing meet on Monday amid a Czech claim that
compulsory quotas would be illegal
Ian Traynor in Brussels / Monday 21 September 2015 13.37 BST
/ http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/sep/21/refugee-crisis-anti-quota-eu-leaders-meet-amid-deadlock
Central and eastern European leaders strongly opposed to
attempts by Brussels and Berlin to impose refugee quotas on are meeting
Luxembourg’s foreign minister in Prague to discuss their reaction.
Their meeting with Jean Asselborn on Monday comes before talks
between EU leaders on Tuesday and Wednesday to try to decide on what already
looks like a vain attempt to limit the flow of refugees and migrants into
Europe.
After months of being consistently behind the curve in
grappling with the EU’s huge migration crisis, interior ministers will hold a
meeting on Tuesday, focused on the highly divisive issue of mandatory refugee
sharing across the union. There will then be an emergency summit of leaders on
Wednesday.
Asselborn’s meeting follows a letter from the Czech
government, which wrote to Brussels arguing that compulsory quotas were illegal
and that it could take the issue to the European court of justice in
Luxembourg.
“The terrain is still very uncertain,” said a senior source
from Luxembourg, which will chair Tuesday’s meeting. “We don’t yet have
agreement. It’s going to be very, very difficult.”
This week’s fresh attempt to agree on a quota system comes
amid the deepest divisions between western and eastern Europe since the former
Soviet-bloc countries joined the EU a decade ago.
At issue is the paltry figure of 66,000 refugees being
shared across the EU after being moved from Italy and Greece. They have already
agreed to share 40,000 and were to redistribute a further 120,000. But 54,000
of those were from Hungary, whose hardline anti-immigration government, which
passed a law on Monday allowing the army to use “non-lethal” force on migrants,
wants no part of the scheme.
Given that up to a million people are expected to enter
Germany alone this year and that Frontex, the EU’s border agency, says 500,000
are currently preparing to leave Turkey for the EU, the figures being fought
over in Brussels are risible.
But the numbers are not the real issue. The row is about
power and sovereignty. In the end it seems that all countries will join in
sharing refugees, with the exception of Britain which has opted out of the
scheme. The other two countries with optouts, Ireland and Denmark, have agreed
to take part, leaving the UK isolated.
For the east Europeans, the vexed question is one of
decision taking – whether Brussels and Berlin sets their quota or whether they
decide themselves to take in refugees. They feel they are being bullied and
blackmailed by the Germans who have threatened to withhold EU funding for the
recalcitrants.
For the supporters of quotas, especially in the European
commission, the numbers are also less important. For Brussels, the key factor
is that the start of mandatory sharing would mark the first tentative steps
towards common EU policies on refugees, and set a precedent to be built on.
Germany is the biggest and strongest backer of the proposed
new regime, not least since it is a replica of the system practised in Germany.
It has a well-functioning federalised scheme spreading and funding the burden
across the 16 German länder (or states), based on a formula that takes account
of local wealth, unemployment rates and immigrant population density.
In effect, the European commission is proposing to extend
the German model to the EU. If there is no consensus on Tuesday, the pro-quotas
camp could push the issue to a qualified majority vote which they would
comfortably win. But that could open up deep divisions and cause major
political damage.
It would mean forcing countries to take in people they don’t
want and send people to countries where they do not want to go, said an EU
official who believed a vote on such an incendiary issue would be
counter-productive.
The summit on Wednesday is to focus on how to keep people
out rather than how to bring them in, while avoiding the mayhem of recent weeks
in the Balkans and central Europe where borders have been opening and closing
on a daily basis in an atmosphere of panic and chaos.
Croatian police are overwhelmed as thousands of refugees
attempt to board a train in the town of Tovarnik on Sunday
The summit will concentrate on ways of stemming the flow
from Turkey and Libya and helping the transit countries of the Balkans –
effectively proposing to bribe neighbouring countries to keep the migrants from
reaching the EU.
Germany has been admired for its open-door policy on Syrian
refugees. It is also being blamed for the mess because of unilateral
decision-taking that has sown confusion and kneejerk reactions in the countries
en route to Germany from the Balkans – Hungary, Serbia, Croatia, Slovenia and
Austria. There is also bewilderment about what Germany’s policy is.
Since April, when the drowning of 400 migrants in the
Mediterranean raised the alarm, EU governments have staged several emergency
meetings in response to horrible events – the death of a toddler on a Turkish
beach, the asphyxiation of 70 migrants in a sealed lorry in Austria.
The governments have bickered and quarrelled, failing to
agree on coherent policies. Only the European commission has delivered a
semblance of a joined-up strategy, including the plan for mandatory refugee
quotas.
There is talk of beefing up Frontex. But so far, the 26
countries of the Schengen free-travel area have supplied only 64 extra
personnel to the borders agency, seconded for six months. And, while
reinforcing life-saving naval operations in the Mediterranean, the countries
have also failed to redeem all their pledges of logistical support for the
mission.
There is lots of talk of funding capacities in Turkey and
building “reception centres” or refugee camps in Africa, the Middle East and
the Balkans. But senior diplomats say these discussions are sketchy and vague.
The commissioner in charge, Dimitris Avramopoulos, has admitted that the target
countries are reluctant to host the EU-proposed camps.
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