EU to help ‘frontline’ Hungary cope with migrant wave

Published July 1, 2015
Debrecen (Hungary): Inmates sit around a tree at the local refugee camp at about 220 km east from the capital Budapest on Tuesday.—AFP
Debrecen (Hungary): Inmates sit around a tree at the local refugee camp at about 220 km east from the capital Budapest on Tuesday.—AFP

BUDAPEST: The European Commission has pledged to send financial aid and experts to Hungary to help it cope with a surge in illegal immigration this year, a senior Brussels official said in Budapest on Tuesday.

“Hungary will receive nearly eight million euros ($9 million) of support to help it cope with the migration issue,” said Dimitris Avramopoulos, the commission’s senior official for migration issues, told journalists after a meeting with Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto.

Calling European Union member Hungary a “frontline” state like Italy and Greece, Avramopoulos said “Europe will always support frontline member states”.

“Hungary is under pressure. We were talking so far about Italy and Greece, now we added Hungary,” he noted.

Brussels also offered to send asylum experts and help set up temporary “hot-spot” tents to speed up identification and registration of migrants and processing of asylum requests, Avramopoulos said.

In the last two years, Hungary, also a member of Europe’s passport-free Schengen zone, has become a major transit country for refugees and migrants attempting to reach wealthy Western countries like Austria and Germany by land rather than sea.

Prime Minister Viktor Orban complained last week in Brussels that Hungary was receiving little help from Brussels compared to Italy and Greece.

“Now more attention is being paid to Hungary,” Avramopoulos said on Tuesday.

In 2014, Hungary received more asylum requests per capita than any other EU country apart from Sweden, up to nearly 43,000 from just 2,000 in 2012.

Most come from Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq, but also from Kosovo.

This year, more than 50,000 migrants tried to cross into Hungary via Serbia between January 1 and May 31 — representing an 880-per cent increase compared to the same period in 2014, according to the EU’s Frontex border agency.

Published in Dawn, July 1st, 2015

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