Austria
curtails asylum rights
By NIKOLAJ NIELSEN
BRUSSELS, TODAY,
09:29
Austria has passed
one of Europe's toughest asylum laws, designed to stop inflows of
people seeking international protection.
Lawmakers passed the
new bill on Wednesday (27 April) amid broader fears over migration
that have helped the far-right Freedom Party (FPOe) to surge in
popularity, with its main candidate taking a surprise lead in
presidential elections.
The law allows the
federal government to declare a "state of emergency" and
refuse entry to migrants if numbers suddenly rise.
The law is expected
to sail through the parliament's upper chamber and come into force by
June.
The new measures
will give border police the power to turn back asylum seekers
including Syrians, denying them the right to have their cases heard.
Those who can
convince the police that their lives are in danger or that they risk
degrading treatment in a neighbouring country will be allowed to
apply for asylum.
Others with
immediate family in Austria can also lodge an application but will
only be able to rejoin their loved ones after a three-year delay.
Everyone else is
turned back in a step similar to that taken by Hungary last year.
'Against history'
Human Rights Watch
says the Austrian law risks instituting blanket, automatic detention
without due attention to particularly vulnerable asylum seekers.
“These measures
constitute a legal wall to asylum just as despicable as a razor-wire
fence,” said the NGO's Judith Sunderland.
“Austria should be
working with other European Union countries to make sure people have
a fair chance to get the protection they need, not taking unilateral
decisions to pass asylum seekers around like hot potatoes.”
The legislative push
comes amid another controversial move by Austrian authorities to
erect a 400m fence and tighten border controls along the Brenner Pass
with Italy.
Italian prime
minister Matteo Renzi described the new border restrictions as
"shamelessly against European rules, as well as being against
history, against logic and against the future".
The EU commission
earlier this month warned against the Brenner Pass barrier plan,
noting that any internal border control "has to be exceptional
and proportionate".
But Austria's
interior minister Wolfgang Sobotka said the new rules and barriers
were needed despite the relatively low number of people now entering
the country following border clampdowns along the Western Balkan
route.
"So many other
EU members fail to do their part," he said.
Fears are mounting
the Balkan route closure will spur others to take the Central
Mediterranean route from Libya to Italy.
In February, Austria
imposed a daily cap of 80 asylum applications and restricted migrant
entries to 3,200 per day.
The limits drew a
sharp rebuke from the EU commissioner for migration Dimitris
Avramopoulos.
“Austria has a
legal obligation to accept any asylum application that is made on its
territory or at its border,” said Avramopoulos in a letter sent in
February to Austria's chancellor, Werner Faymann.
Austria received
90,000 asylum applications in 2015.
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