EU faces
migration rebellion as Poland vows to block asylum-seekers
More and
more member countries are clashing with Brussels over how to treat incoming
migrants.
Poland has
seen thousands of people trying to cross its heavily forested border with
Belarus. |
October 14, 2024 8:05 pm CET
By Gabriel Gavin and Wojciech Kość
https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-migration-rebellion-poland-vow-block-asylum-seeker/
Poland’s government aims to temporarily suspend the right of
arrivals to claim asylum even though that clashes with both international law
and European Union rules — but Prime Minister Donald Tusk insists he will not
backtrack.
“It is our right and our duty to protect the Polish and
European border. Its security will not be negotiated. With anyone,” Tusk said
on social media on Monday afternoon.
Tusk, a former president of the European Council and a key
leader in the center-right European People’s Party that also includes European
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, is reflecting a harsher tone on
migration sweeping the Continent.
A tough border policy is also part of Tusk’s effort to
ensure that his Civic Coalition party is in pole position to win next year’s
presidential election. Polish voters are increasingly skeptical about receiving
migrants — especially from non-European countries.
Over the last three years, Poland has seen thousands of
people trying to cross its heavily forested border with Belarus. They have been
encouraged to fly to Minsk by Belarusian dictator Alexander Lukashenko, and are
then directed by Belarusian authorities toward the border with Poland as well
as Lithuania.
Polish authorities call Lukashenko’s tactic “weaponizing”
migration as a way of harming the EU and helping his Russian ally, while von
der Leyen has denounced what she called a “cruel form of hybrid threat.”
Tusk said at least 26,000 people, largely from the Middle
East and Africa, crossed over from Belarus this year alone. That’s also
prompted Germany to impose border restrictions of its own, complaining about
migrants moving west after crossing into the EU.
The Polish government announced Saturday it would move to
suspend the rights of new arrivals to claim asylum.
Brussels warned that is almost certainly incompatible with
bloc-wide rules. The Commission told POLITICO that member countries must deal
with “hybrid attacks” from Belarus and Russia “without compromising on our
values.”
Tusk, however, insists he’s only following the lead of other
countries.
“The temporary suspension of asylum applications was
introduced in Finland in May. It is a response to the hybrid war declared
against the entire European Union (primarily Poland) by the regimes in Moscow
and Minsk, which involves organizing mass transfers of people across our
borders,” Tusk wrote online.
In November, Finland temporarily closed its border with
Russia and refused to process new applications after groups of would-be
asylum-seekers tried to enter. Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia subsequently told
POLITICO they were leaving open the option of following suit if they too faced
the same tactics.
Warsaw is aware it is treading a fine line with the new
restrictions.
“We need to find a balance between what is being proposed in
the context of border protection and what arises from international
obligations,” Justice Minister Adam Bodnar told radio TOK FM Monday.
Break with
Brussels
Migration is an increasingly potent political issue and one
of the reasons for a surge in support for far-right or populist parties across
the Continent. They charge that the bloc’s traditional approach has left the
doors wide open to people abusing the system.
In response, the Commission in June presented a new package
of measures on migration, designed to increase the powers of member countries
to return those ineligible to stay in the bloc and introduce a “permanent,
legally-binding, but flexible solidarity mechanism to ensure that no EU country
is left alone when under pressure.”
But countries bordering Russia and Belarus worry that those
measures are still too timid to deter Lukashenko and Russian leader Vladimir
Putin.
“The current migration rules do not solve the security
challenge that we can see, for example, on the eastern border of the EU,” said
a diplomat from one of the countries affected, granted anonymity to speak
frankly. “It is not the enemies of the EU that should decide who enters our
territory.”
According to the diplomat, a meeting of EU leaders at a
European Council this week should be used for “an honest discussion to clearly
identify and understand the new types of risks. And then we should talk about
EU-wide solutions.”
Domestic
politics
Tusk’s move is causing dismay among human rights groups and
creating tensions within his governing coalition.
“We would like to remind Prime Minister Donald Tusk that the
right to asylum is a human right. Groundless suspension of this right, even
temporarily, is unacceptable and is in conflict with, among others, the Geneva
Convention and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,” Amnesty
International’s Polish office said on X on Saturday.
Szymon Hołownia, the speaker of parliament and leader of the
Poland 2050 party that is part of the coalition, issued a careful statement
calling asylum a “sacred right” but also noting it could be suspended “during a
state of emergency or martial law and under the ongoing supervision of the
parliament.”
When he was in opposition, Tusk and his allies frequently
criticized the former nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) party government for
building a barrier along the border with Belarus and for pushing back migrants
rather than hearing their asylum claims.
Human rights groups said that was illegal and left people to
die in remote forests and bogs because Belarus often refused to allow them back
into its own territory.
But once in power, Tusk has taken a much harder line on the
border issue.
“Tusk appears to be driven by a desire to avoid getting
defeated by PiS on the migration front,” said Jakub Jaraczewski of Democracy
Reporting, a Berlin-based NGO.
While initial reports of refugees seeking asylum in Poland
aroused sympathy, especially among human rights groups and those on the
political left, attitudes have hardened in recent years as Lukashenko shows no
sign of stopping his migration policy.
According to a June poll carried out by Opinia24, Poles
remain fairly open to culturally similar Belarusians or Ukrainians but only 14
percent would be happy with an influx of other nationals.
“Tusk has to show the voters that he is tough,” said
Grzegorz Kuczyński, an expert on Eastern Europe with the Warsaw Institute think
tank. “The previous Polish government built a barrier and sent police and
military there. The current government is continuing this policy, despite
having criticized it while in opposition.”
“Poles mostly support a tough immigration policy,” he added.
“That is why [Tusk] has taken this position. In this way, he is taking away one
of the main arguments of the opposition.”
Gabriel Gavin reported from Brussels. Wojciech Kość reported
from Warsaw.


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