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EU fails to reach migrant resettlement target

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EU ministers failed to agree Monday on how to redistribute an agreed total of 40,000 Syrian and Eritrean migrants from overstretched Italy and Greece, officials said.

They agreed to start relocating more than 32,000 of them around the 28-nation EU but fell 8,000 short of their overall target agreed by EU leaders at a bad tempered summit in June.

"We have a solution for relocation in this year. For next year we are not yet exactly there, we will talk about this in October or November," German Secretary of State Emily Haber told reporters after the talks.

The European Commission, the executive arm of the EU, originally proposed the 40,000 figure after an unprecedented migrant shipwreck in the Mediterranean in April that left nearly 800 people dead.

EU leaders then agreed on the figure in June but have been bitterly divided over how to reach it, first rejecting compulsory quotas and then squabbling with each other over how to redistribute them.

Luxembourg, which holds the rotating six-month presidency of the EU, said the ministers agreed to relocate 32,256 Syrians and Eritreans who had landed in Greece and Italy.

Syrian refugees who arrived on June 18  2015 to the island of Lesbos wait to be registered at the po...
Syrian refugees who arrived on June 18, 2015 to the island of Lesbos wait to be registered at the port of Mytilini, Greece following a 6km-long march
Louisa Gouliamaki, AFP/File

It added that they also agreed to relocate 22,504 Syrian refugees currently living in camps outside the EU.

More than 1,900 migrants have died this year making the perilous journey across the Mediterranean to Europe, while around 150,000 people have made the crossing, the International Organization for Migration said earlier this month.

France and Germany agreed earlier in July to accept some 21,000 refugees and asylum seekers as part of EU efforts to deal with the flood of migrants seeking refuge from conflicts and poverty across North Africa and the Middle East.

Other governments -- including those in central and eastern Europe -- objected to earlier EU proposals to establish mandatory quotas in meeting the targets.

EU sources said the countries that were most reluctant to admit migrants were Hungry, Austria, Slovakia, Slovenia, the Baltic countries and Spain.

EU ministers failed to agree Monday on how to redistribute an agreed total of 40,000 Syrian and Eritrean migrants from overstretched Italy and Greece, officials said.

They agreed to start relocating more than 32,000 of them around the 28-nation EU but fell 8,000 short of their overall target agreed by EU leaders at a bad tempered summit in June.

“We have a solution for relocation in this year. For next year we are not yet exactly there, we will talk about this in October or November,” German Secretary of State Emily Haber told reporters after the talks.

The European Commission, the executive arm of the EU, originally proposed the 40,000 figure after an unprecedented migrant shipwreck in the Mediterranean in April that left nearly 800 people dead.

EU leaders then agreed on the figure in June but have been bitterly divided over how to reach it, first rejecting compulsory quotas and then squabbling with each other over how to redistribute them.

Luxembourg, which holds the rotating six-month presidency of the EU, said the ministers agreed to relocate 32,256 Syrians and Eritreans who had landed in Greece and Italy.

Syrian refugees who arrived on June 18  2015 to the island of Lesbos wait to be registered at the po...

Syrian refugees who arrived on June 18, 2015 to the island of Lesbos wait to be registered at the port of Mytilini, Greece following a 6km-long march
Louisa Gouliamaki, AFP/File

It added that they also agreed to relocate 22,504 Syrian refugees currently living in camps outside the EU.

More than 1,900 migrants have died this year making the perilous journey across the Mediterranean to Europe, while around 150,000 people have made the crossing, the International Organization for Migration said earlier this month.

France and Germany agreed earlier in July to accept some 21,000 refugees and asylum seekers as part of EU efforts to deal with the flood of migrants seeking refuge from conflicts and poverty across North Africa and the Middle East.

Other governments — including those in central and eastern Europe — objected to earlier EU proposals to establish mandatory quotas in meeting the targets.

EU sources said the countries that were most reluctant to admit migrants were Hungry, Austria, Slovakia, Slovenia, the Baltic countries and Spain.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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