EU offers incentives to Turkey to tackle refugee crisis

Published October 7, 2015
Hegyeshalom  (Hungary): A police officer watches as migrants arrive at a train station on Tuesday.—Reuters
Hegyeshalom (Hungary): A police officer watches as migrants arrive at a train station on Tuesday.—Reuters

BRUSSELS: The European Union is ready to offer Turkey new incentives to better tackle the Syria refugee crisis, including money, the easing of visa restrictions and better intelligence sharing.

The offer came in an action plan unveiled on Tuesday, which in exchange, would see Turkey improve its asylum and documentation procedures and beef up border security.

Around 2 million refugees from Syria are currently in Turkey, and tens of thousands of others have entered the EU via Greece this year, overwhelming coast guards and reception facilities.

The “Draft Action Plan” was presented to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan during his two-day visit to Belgium and the EU, but has yet to be officially accepted by Turkey.

It doesn’t address demands made by Erdogan earlier on Tuesday for Turkey’s EU membership process to move ahead more quickly. Nor does it directly address calls he made Monday for European backing for the creation of a safe haven and no-fly zone around Syria’s northern border, which he said are key to ending the refugee crisis.

However, there could be some wiggle room in the EU pledge to provide assistance aimed at Syria refugees to ensure “the weakening of push factors forcing them to move towards Turkey.”

Under the offer, Turkey would receive up to 1 billion euros ($1.1 billion) to help manage its refugee crisis, and EU funding to help build six reception centres for refugees in Turkey.

By accepting the plan and implementing it, Ankara “would also contribute to accelerate Turkey’s fulfilment of the visa liberalisation roadmap benchmarks,” the text said, referring to Ankara’s long-held desire to smooth travel for its citizens.

The EU is caught in a delicate balancing act, wanting to encourage Turkey to better control its borders amid continued criticism of the abuses of the Kurdish minority there and attacks on the media and justice system. “If we want to cope with this problem, Turkey is absolutely a key partner,” European Council President Donald Tusk told EU lawmakers Tuesday.

“I know that this is a very dramatic dilemma,” he said. “We have to try to cooperate with Turkey because in fact we have no other options.”

During his two-day visit to Brussels, Erdogan warned the Europeans that many more people are likely to flee northern Syria.

Tusk said that “according to Turkish estimates, another 3 million potential refugees may come from Aleppo and its neighbourhood.”

He warned that “the world around us does not intend to help Europe” and that some of the EU’s neighbours “look with satisfaction at our troubles.”

Tusk also lashed out at countries for failing to fully respect EU asylum and border rules, naming Hungary, Italy, Slovakia and Greece.

“We have to respect commonly agreed rules,” he said, adding that when countries say they intend to flout the laws “they undermine the essence of solidarity and our community.”

Meanwhile, Austrian Chancellor Werner Faymann arrived on the eastern Aegean island of Lesbos with Greece’s prime minister to see the impact of the refugee crisis and to examine facilities set up to handle the thousands of people who arrive daily.

Published in Dawn, October 7th, 2015

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