Refugee
crisis: EU summit exposes impotence and unfulfilled pledges
European
solidarity weakens further as divisions grow between countries over
border control and refugee quotas
Ian Traynor in
Brussels
Thursday 17 December
2015 18.07 GMT
European leaders are
struggling to agree on action to manage the refugee crisis amid ever
deepening divisions, impotence and failure to follow through on
earlier pledges.
While David
Cameron’s campaign to refashion the terms of Britain’s EU
membership was set to occupy much of a critical summit, for many of
the other leaders the migration crisis loomed larger, given that an
estimated 1.2 million people have entered the European Union this
year, mainly from the Middle East.
Leaders were to
discuss incendiary proposals tabled by the European commission this
week to create an EU border and coastguard, empowered to overrule
national governments when the EU’s external frontiers are deemed to
be inadequately secured.
The proposal won
strong support on Thursday from the German and French leaders, but in
many parts of the EU it was viewed as an assault on national
sovereignty.
The summit, the
fifth such meeting in a row to focus on the migration emergency,
revisited many of the measures that heads of government and interior
ministers had decided on since last spring, but had not put into
effect.
“The measures have
been taken, but not applied,” said the French president, François
Hollande, for whom tough security policies are particularly important
after the terrorist attacks in Paris last month.
Britain is only
marginally involved in the policy debate because it is not part of
the 26-country free-travel Schengen zone, takes no part in EU common
asylum policies and needs not take part in EU interior policy
coordination.
The worsening
divisions over what to do about refugees, the future of the Schengen
area, and the re-establishment of national border controls were laid
bare by a mini-summit of eight countries that preceded the full
meeting.
The German
chancellor, Angela Merkel, led a session of seven other government
leaders from Scandinavia, Benelux, Austria, and Greece aimed at
trying to agree on how to share quotas of refugees taken directly
from Turkey as part of a flagging €3bn (£2.2bn) deal Brussels
recently reached with Ankara.
Merkel is the
driving force behind the initiative. But the “coalition of the
willing” could only attract 8 of 28 EU countries, highlighting that
there is no longer a majority in the EU prepared to support a new
system of permanent quotas to share refugees across the union.
Hollande made clear
that France would observe a system of quotas agreed in September,
spreading 160,000 people across the EU from Greece and Italy, but
that Paris would not take part in further similar schemes.
Merkel has said the
future of the Schengen system could be in jeopardy unless there is
more generous burden-sharing of refugees. Around 1 million newcomers
have entered Germany this year.
The mini-summit
linked governments who were willing to share refugees “voluntarily”,
rather than on the mandatory basis being proposed by the European
commission. This strongly suggested that, at least for now, Merkel
has abandoned hopes of securing a “European solution” to the
crisis.
The figures being
discussed have rapidly collapsed from the ambitious to the arguably
meaningless, given the scale of the problem. A month ago, Berlin and
others were talking of taking 400,000-500,000 people directly from
Turkey. By Thursday the figure had sunk to 50,000-80,000.
The eastern European
states most strongly opposed to taking in refugees were threatened
with cuts to the large cash handouts they receive from the EU budget.
Apart from Greece, all the countries attending the mini-summit are
net contributors to the EU budget and are also the biggest recipients
of refugees, an expensive undertaking.
The Austrian
chancellor, Werner Faymann, told the eastern European countries they
could not expect to shun “solidarity” on refugees while receiving
hundreds of billions in transfers from western Europe.
A confidential paper
on migration presented to the summit by Luxembourg, which is
currently in the EU’s six-month rotating chair, revealed a long
list of unredeemed pledges by national governments and false
promises.
Of the September
agreement to shift 160,000 refugees from Greece and Italy, 184 people
had actually been moved to other host countries. Of an earlier
agreement to take 22,000 refugees from camps in Turkey, Lebanon and
Jordan, a mere 600 were beneficiaries to date. Of 11 reception
centres promised for Greece and Italy months ago, only two were up
and running.
And Merkel’s hopes
that the deal struck with Turkey in October would stem the flow of
people across the Aegean into Greece also appeared to be fading. This
month, around 4,000 were making the crossing every day, the report
said. This was a bit lower than in November, but the report ascribed
the reduction to the weather rather than to Turkish action.
“We agreed a
certain number of rules with Turkey,” Hollande said. “If we can’t
get control of our external borders, then we can’t go further on
the promises we made to Turkey.”
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário