Hungary leads opposition to EU quota for migrants

Published September 24, 2015
Brussels: From left: French President Francois Hollande, Denmark’s Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen and European Council President Donald Tusk attend a European Union leaders extraordinary summit on the migrants crisis on Wednesday.—Reuters
Brussels: From left: French President Francois Hollande, Denmark’s Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen and European Council President Donald Tusk attend a European Union leaders extraordinary summit on the migrants crisis on Wednesday.—Reuters

BRUSSELS: The EU’s president urged leaders gathering for an emergency summit on Wednesday to stop fighting over a refugee quota deal and take urgent action to secure the bloc’s borders in the face of “millions” of migrants.

After ministers forced through a deal to relocate 120,000 refugees in the teeth of opposition from eastern states, Hungary’s hardline prime minister angrily denounced Germany’s “moral imperialism”.

Slovakia furiously vowed to dispute the quota deal in court, underscoring the deep divisions that have emerged over Europe’s biggest migration crisis since World War II.

Donald Tusk, head of the European Council, called for an end to “the cycle of mutual recriminations and misunderstandings” fuelling the split between the EU’s richer west and poorer former communist east.

“The most urgent question we should ask ourselves tonight is how to regain control of our external borders,” Tusk, a former Polish prime minister, told reporters.

“The conflicts in the Middle East, especially in Syria and Iraq, will not end anytime soon,” he said. “This means today we’re talking about millions of potential refugees trying to reach Europe, not thousands”. Draft summit conclusions seen by AFP call for EU states to give one billion euros ($1.1 billion) to the World Food Programme and UN refugee agency to help refugees in Syria.

They further called for more aid to affected countries outside the bloc including the western Balkans and Syria’s neighbours Turkey, Jordan and Lebanon.

The EU leaders also said extra staff and equipment should be sent to shore up border controls and the EU’s border agency Frontex.The 120,000 refugee relocations are just a faction of the 500,000 migrants who have come to Europe’s shores so far this year and the estimated four million camped on Syria’s borders.

Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico, whose country will have to take 800 migrants under the relocation plan, said he was prepared to break the EU’s rules rather than accept the “diktat” from Brussels.

The scale of the challenge was evident in Croatia, where nearly 9,000 migrants entered on Tuesday alone, a record daily number since they started to arrive a week ago after Hungary built a fence on its border with Serbia.

Over the last week, more than 44,000 refugees have entered Croatia from non-EU Serbia.

Published in Dawn, September 24th , 2015

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