EU passes asylum and migration pact after eight
years of deadlock
European parliament president says ‘history made’ with
vote to pass changes, which have been criticised by NGOs
Lisa
O'Carroll in Brussels
Wed 10 Apr
2024 18.17 CEST
Sweeping
changes to the EU’s migration laws have been passed in a knife-edge series of
votes in the European parliament, with supporters of the new laws calling the
move historic but NGOs saying they are a step back for human rights.
The vote on
Wednesday, which is now expected to be rubber-stamped by the member states,
ends eight years of deadlock over repeated efforts to tighten up border
management and asylum processes in the 27-member bloc.
Champions
of the laws, who had been campaigning to get the legislation passed in the face
of a rise in popularity of the far right before the European parliament
elections in June, seized on the move as a great victory.
They said
it would fast-track asylum procedures at the EU’s border, impose tough new
screening systems and return people who do not qualify for international
protection to their countries.
Roberta
Metsola, the European parliament president, wrote on X: “History made. We have
delivered a robust legislative framework on how to deal with migration and
asylum in the EU. It has been more than 10 years in the making. But we kept our
word. A balance between solidarity and responsibility. This is the European
way.”
However,
tensions in the huge auditorium as the voting started betrayed the deeply
divisive nature of the laws. Proceedings were interrupted by protesters dressed
in white T-shirts in the public gallery, who shouted at MEPs: “This pact kills!
Vote ‘no’!” while throwing paper planes carrying the coordinates of shipwrecks
and refugees who have died at EU external borders.
The home
affairs commissioner, Ylva Johansson, who shepherded the legislation through,
was defiant. “I feel proud ... considering when I took office four and a half
years ago, few thought we would make it,” she said.
Civil
society groups, however, hit out at what Eve Geddie, Amnesty International’s
head of the European institutions office and director of advocacy, called a
“failure to show global leadership”.
“After
years of negotiations, EU institutions are now shamefully co-signing an
agreement that they know will lead to greater human suffering,” she said.
“For people
escaping conflict, persecution or economic insecurity these reforms will mean
less protection and a greater risk of facing human rights violations across
Europe – including illegal and violent pushbacks, arbitrary detention and
discriminatory policing.
Oxfam had
earlier denounced the pact as a recipe for “deterrents, detention and
deportation” rather than protection of human rights.
MEPs on the
left and the Greens, who voted against eight of the 10 pieces of proposed
legislation on the table, also criticised the bill for failing to prioritise
guarantees for human rights.
Rightwing
politicians had their own reasons for opposing the reforms, arguing that the
new laws did not go far enough and would cause a spike in migration.
Among those
that voted against parts of the asylum and migration pact were the French and
Spanish far-right parties Rassemblement National and Vox, as well as the Polish
nationalist populists Law & Justice, and Viktor Orbán’s Fidesz.
They had
earlier denounced the 10-part pact as a licence for people-smugglers and a blow
to member states’ sovereignty.
The Belgian
prime minister, Alexander De Croo, said parties who had tried to block the pact
were voting for the status quo and leaving countries such as Italy, which has
various far-right parties, to deal with the people smuggling crisis on its
shores alone.
The new
laws must now be approved by European leaders, with opposition guaranteed from
Poland’s new prime minister, Donald Tusk, who has said he will not agree to new
rules allowing for relocation of migrants from countries under pressure.
“We will
find ways so that even if the migration pact comes into force in roughly
unchanged form, we will protect Poland against the relocation mechanism,” he
said, underlining his country’s argument that is already accommodating around
1m Ukrainian refugees.
Sources who
worked on the legislation said every member state could opt out of the
relocation of migrants with measures allowing them instead to contribute “in
kind with equipment or experts such as lawyers”.
In one of
the most controversial measures they will also be allowed to pay €20,000
(£17,000) a head into a fund for those people they do not accept under the
solidarity measure.


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