“If we don’t deliver
some immediate and concrete actions on the ground in the next days
and weeks, I believe the whole European Union and Europe as a whole
will start to fall apart.”
Western
Balkan countries agree to work together on migration
Leaders
commit to tighter controls on the flow of refugees, but details still
need to be worked out.
By HANS VON DER
BURCHARD, FLORIAN EDER AND JACOPO BARIGAZZI 10/25/15, 2:03 PM CET
Updated 10/26/15, 8:17 AM CET
Leaders of nations
along the Western Balkans migration route agreed Sunday to impose
tighter controls on the flow of refugees from the Middle East to
Europe, committing to provide shelter for an additional 100,000
asylum-seekers and to refrain from waving migrants through to other
countries.
The agreement for
closer coordination among 11 countries, including three from outside
the EU, came after a lengthy struggle to reach a compromise on a key
operational point: How many asylum-seekers should be sheltered in
Greece, the country where most of them first arrive.
After what sources
in the room called “tense” discussions, Greece agreed to provide
shelter for an additional 30,000 refugees before the end of the year,
plus another 20,000 with help from international organizations. An
additional 50,000 refugees will be sheltered elsewhere along the
Western Balkans route.
“The only way to
restore order is to slow down the migration flows,” said European
Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker after the meeting. “We
have made to clear to everyone this evening that waving [refugees]
through has to be stopped.”
German Chancellor
Angela Merkel cautioned that the agreement “doesn’t solve the
overall problem. It’s just a contribution to what is a more
reasonable way of dealing with the problem… Further steps will
follow this which will lead to a solution.”
The short-term fixes
agreed to Sunday night also included the creation of permanent
“contact points” to allow regular information exchanges among
countries, and immediate incentives to provide additional
humanitarian aid to refugees in the region.
The countries will
also work to increase border-control efforts, with the EU agreeing to
send 400 police officers “within a week” to Slovenia. There was
also a commitment on the part of the countries to do a better job of
registering arrivals of migrants and returning those deemed
ineligible for asylum in Europe.
Sources said leaders
insisted on pushing Greece to do a better job of guarding its borders
and processing the inflow of migrants. Imposing on Athens a
requirement to shelter more refugees was seen as way to demonstrate
that “Greece needs to take up its responsibilities.”
According to one
source in the room, the atmosphere in the meeting was “tense,”
with Merkel, who is under increasing political pressure at home to
deal with a record influx of refugees, telling other leaders that the
EU is in “a very fragile situation.”
Another source,
surprised at the level of alarm from Merkel, interpreted the remark
as a warning that failure on this issue would lead to the “end of
the EU as we know it.”
Asked about her
remarks after the meeting, Merkel said “this is one of the biggest
tests Europe has faced ever. We are confronted with global conflicts
that touch us now directly, and in such a situation Europe must
demonstrate that it is a continent of values and solidarity.”
But that solidarity
was not always on display during the meeting. At one point the
tension flared in a clash between Croatian Prime Minister Zoran
Milanović and his Slovenian counterpart Miro Cerar, whose common
border has become the newest flashpoint in the refugee crisis.
According to a Slovenian diplomat, Milanović was too “aggressive”
in the meeting.
Short-term solutions
Juncker, who called
the mini-summit at Merkel’s request, had urged the leaders to focus
on “practical, operational” solutions to address short-term needs
in the crisis, rather than big-picture political disputes, according
to an EU official with knowledge of the talks.
“[Juncker] told
leaders, ‘Please tell us what you need,’” the official said.
“They are not looking to redefine a new European policy on
refugees. This is about concrete, specific operational improvements.”
The unusual nature
of the meeting was highlighted by the press conference afterward,
which featured Juncker and Merkel, who convened this summit, and UN
High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres but not Donald Tusk.
The European Council president normally presides over full EU summits
but was merely an attendee at this gathering.
Speaking to
reporters after the first summit session had concluded and before a
dinner with the leaders had begun, Serbian Prime Minister Aleksandar
Vučić said the meeting had been useful if only because it opened
lines of communication among the countries along the migration route.
“At least we had a
chance to speak to each other, to hear each other and to learn a bit
about the problems that all the others are facing,” Vučić said.
“I’m not sure that we’re going to conclude something that would
be very helpful immediately but I’m sure that at least we
understood each other and we’ll be ready to take actions jointly in
the future.”
Not every leader was
interested in speaking during the meeting, according to a source in
the room: When asked to speak by Juncker, Hungarian leader Viktor
Orbán declined.
“What matters now
is delivery,” said Tina Strefela, spokesperson for Slovenian leader
Cerar. “We need leaders to stick to the political commitments
agreed upon, and that has to start tomorrow.”
Details of the
agreement were left to be worked out in the coming days and weeks at
ministerial level. But even before the meeting began on Sunday there
was dissatisfaction among participants over a draft statement calling
on countries along the Western Balkans migration route to stop
letting refugees pass through their borders.
Croatia’s
Milanović lashed out at the proposal Saturday, saying “whoever
wrote it does not understand how things work, he woke up from several
months dreaming. There will be no obligations for Croatia … not a
single one.”
As he arrived at the
meeting Sunday, Milanović reiterated that he would not support the
imposition of “any further commitment or obligations” on the
countries. “I came to discuss, not to adopt a joint conclusion,
which leads nowhere,” he said.
The meeting was held
amid mounting difficulties facing Europe, which is struggling to cope
with a migration crisis that keeps on shifting. Even as leaders
discussed how to deal with the crisis the composition of the flow is
changing rapidly, according to data from Macedonia, one of the
transit countries in the route.
The number of
Syrians, who are eligible for refugee status, is decreasing while the
number of other migrants is on the rise. Syrians transiting Macedonia
have decreased from nearly 90 percent of the flow in August to about
60 percent in October while the number of Afghans, who do not qualify
for the status of refugee, has been rising and now they represent
almost 20 percent of the flow.
“The refugee
corridor is turning into a migrant corridor,” Macedonian President
Gjorge Ivanov told POLITICO. The country, with only 2 million
inhabitants, has seen so far this year 420,000 refugees and migrants
transiting its territory, government data show.
Slovenia last week
called for increased protection of the EU’s external borders after
turning into the latest frontline in the crisis. Last Tuesday
Slovenia mobilized its army to deal with the sheer numbers of
migrants arriving at its borders after Hungary closed its border with
Croatia.
With a population of
around 2 million, Slovenia claims to be overstrained by the influx
and asked the Commission last week for €60 million over the next
six months to aid the handling of refugees.
‘The situation is
serious’
“The situation is
truly serious,” Cerar told reporters as he arrived at the meeting.
“If we don’t deliver some immediate and concrete actions on the
ground in the next days and weeks, I believe the whole European Union
and Europe as a whole will start to fall apart.”
In Greece, the
number of arrivals by sea this year has now passed the half-million
mark with the arrival last Monday on the Aegean islands of nearly
8,000 people, the UNHCR said. “Many of the refugees and migrants
are desperate to quickly move onwards, fearing that borders ahead of
them will close,” the UN refugee agency also
said.Migration-map-meeting_FINAL3-01-01 (1)
The document also
includes measures still to be finalized, such as setting up a new
operation by the EU’s border control agency Frontex at the external
land border between Greece and Macedonia and Albania.
Authors:
Hans von der
Burchard , Florian Eder and Jacopo Barigazzi
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