Germans favor tougher EU asylum policy: Poll
Berlin’s EU presidency aims for a bloc-wide deal on
migration this year.
By AITOR
HERNÁNDEZ-MORALES 7/12/20, 1:44 PM CET
A majority
of Germans want the EU to stop asylum seekers from entering the bloc in an
unauthorized manner but instead have refugees brought over directly from camps,
according to a survey published by Welt Am Sonntag.
Fifty-nine
percent of the survey’s respondents supported reconfiguring the bloc's Common
European Asylum System to “prevent asylum seekers from entering the EU
illegally in the future,” and instead focus on bringing in “more vulnerable
people directly from crisis regions.” Thirty percent of respondents were
opposed to that scenario while 11 percent were undecided.
Following
the 2016 refugee crisis, the European Commission put in place measures to
reduce irregular migration but its formal proposal on the matter has been
delayed several times, and a wider consensus on the bloc’s migration policy has
eluded the Council.
While
Southern European countries have called for greater solidarity among EU
countries, Central and Eastern European governments have so far rejected
efforts to get them to accept mandatory quotas of asylum seekers.
Earlier
this week German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said that Germany would
attempt to get EU members to reach a political deal on migration reform while
Berlin holds the bloc’s rotating Council presidency, a period running until
December 31.
Germany has
been the EU member to take in the greatest number of asylum seekers from the
Turkish refugee camps set up as part of a 2016 deal struck between Brussels and
Ankara to stem the flow of refugees entering Europe, resettling 9,967 of the
26,835 migrants brought over, according to Commission figures cited by Welt.

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