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EU pushes Greece on migrant crisis

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The EU piled pressure on Greece on Wednesday over the migrant crisis, telling Athens to improve conditions for refugees to shore up its borders or risk a suspension of the bloc's passport-free zone.

Brussels said Athens must treat asylum seekers better so that other overstretched European Union states can send back migrants who had originally landed in Greece, in line with EU rules.

Greece is bearing the brunt of concerns that the failure to deal properly with the biggest movement of migrants to Europe since World War II threatens the very fabric of the 28-nation bloc.

One million people entered Europe in 2015 with 3,500 people dying on sea crossings, while another 70,000 have arrived this year with more than 400 deaths.

Hundreds of migrants and refugees at the port of Piraeus upon their arrival from the island of Lesbo...
Hundreds of migrants and refugees at the port of Piraeus upon their arrival from the island of Lesbos on February 10, 2016
Louisa Gouliamaki, AFP

EU migration commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos, unveiling a report on the crisis ahead of a summit next week, urged Greece and other states to do more before a new surge of refugees this summer.

"We have lost time already -- this is a fact. And this is not acceptable," Avramopoulos told a news conference at the European Commission, the executive arm of the EU.

The EU's Dublin regulations on migration say people must apply for asylum in the country where they first land -- but that system has been thrown into chaos by the conditions in Greece and the fact many asylum seekers do not want to stay there.

- Protest -

A ruling by the EU's top court in 2011 at the height of Greece's debt crisis said conditions for asylum seekers in Greece were degrading, meaning that other countries could not send them back.

EU's response to the migrant crisis
EU's response to the migrant crisis
Laurence SAUBADU, AFP

"There are still key areas in the asylum process that need to be improved before the Dublin regulation can be fully applied to Greece again, notably in the areas of reception capacity and conditions, access to the asylum procedure, appeals and legal aid," the Commission said.

EU states are due next month to debate changes to the Dublin rules.

EU ambassadors in Brussels meanwhile backed demands by the Commission for Greece to secure its sea and land border with Turkey, the access point for around four-fifths of migrants to Europe.

If Greece fails to comply with the recommendations, Brussels could authorise EU member countries to exceptionally extend border controls within the Schengen area -- including with Greece -- for up to two years.

Greece has been told to improve registration procedures, including making sure migrants are properly fingerprinted and their documents checked against security data bases.

Migrant children at the Greek port of Piraeus on February 10  2016
Migrant children at the Greek port of Piraeus on February 10, 2016
Louisa Gouliamaki, AFP

The envoys nodded through the plans which must now get final approval from EU ministers on Friday, European sources told AFP.

But anger is growing in Greece too, with hundreds of people on the island of Kos protesting on Wednesday against plans to build a migrant registration facility voicing fears about its impact on tourism.

"No to the hotspot on our island," read the banner leading the demonstration by traders and tourism business owners, referring to the facilities the EU wants built on the island of 30,000 inhabitants.

- 'A matter of urgency' -

Avramopoulos, a former Greek minister, had earlier called on both Greece and Italy to "urgently" complete all the planned hotspots on their territory -- with Greece having completed just one of five.

The criticism is certain to anger Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, who on Wednesday compared the EU to the orchestra playing on the deck of the doomed ocean liner Titanic.

Avramopoulos meanwhile also hit out at European Union members for dragging their heels on easing the refugee burden for Greece and Italy, as just 479 out of a planned 160,000 people have been relocated to other states so far.

He said he had written to EU interior ministers with a "clear and strong message" on the "very poor" figures despite a deal agreed last September.

The migration crisis has pushed key tenets of European unity such as the Schengen free travel area and the Dublin migration agreements to the brink of collapse.

The EU has pinned high hopes on the deal it signed in November with Turkey to cut migrant numbers in exchange for three billion euros ($3.2 billion) in aid and faster EU membership talks.

But the commission said Turkey must "as a matter of urgency" make "significant progress."

The EU piled pressure on Greece on Wednesday over the migrant crisis, telling Athens to improve conditions for refugees to shore up its borders or risk a suspension of the bloc’s passport-free zone.

Brussels said Athens must treat asylum seekers better so that other overstretched European Union states can send back migrants who had originally landed in Greece, in line with EU rules.

Greece is bearing the brunt of concerns that the failure to deal properly with the biggest movement of migrants to Europe since World War II threatens the very fabric of the 28-nation bloc.

One million people entered Europe in 2015 with 3,500 people dying on sea crossings, while another 70,000 have arrived this year with more than 400 deaths.

Hundreds of migrants and refugees at the port of Piraeus upon their arrival from the island of Lesbo...

Hundreds of migrants and refugees at the port of Piraeus upon their arrival from the island of Lesbos on February 10, 2016
Louisa Gouliamaki, AFP

EU migration commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos, unveiling a report on the crisis ahead of a summit next week, urged Greece and other states to do more before a new surge of refugees this summer.

“We have lost time already — this is a fact. And this is not acceptable,” Avramopoulos told a news conference at the European Commission, the executive arm of the EU.

The EU’s Dublin regulations on migration say people must apply for asylum in the country where they first land — but that system has been thrown into chaos by the conditions in Greece and the fact many asylum seekers do not want to stay there.

– Protest –

A ruling by the EU’s top court in 2011 at the height of Greece’s debt crisis said conditions for asylum seekers in Greece were degrading, meaning that other countries could not send them back.

EU's response to the migrant crisis

EU's response to the migrant crisis
Laurence SAUBADU, AFP

“There are still key areas in the asylum process that need to be improved before the Dublin regulation can be fully applied to Greece again, notably in the areas of reception capacity and conditions, access to the asylum procedure, appeals and legal aid,” the Commission said.

EU states are due next month to debate changes to the Dublin rules.

EU ambassadors in Brussels meanwhile backed demands by the Commission for Greece to secure its sea and land border with Turkey, the access point for around four-fifths of migrants to Europe.

If Greece fails to comply with the recommendations, Brussels could authorise EU member countries to exceptionally extend border controls within the Schengen area — including with Greece — for up to two years.

Greece has been told to improve registration procedures, including making sure migrants are properly fingerprinted and their documents checked against security data bases.

Migrant children at the Greek port of Piraeus on February 10  2016

Migrant children at the Greek port of Piraeus on February 10, 2016
Louisa Gouliamaki, AFP

The envoys nodded through the plans which must now get final approval from EU ministers on Friday, European sources told AFP.

But anger is growing in Greece too, with hundreds of people on the island of Kos protesting on Wednesday against plans to build a migrant registration facility voicing fears about its impact on tourism.

“No to the hotspot on our island,” read the banner leading the demonstration by traders and tourism business owners, referring to the facilities the EU wants built on the island of 30,000 inhabitants.

– ‘A matter of urgency’ –

Avramopoulos, a former Greek minister, had earlier called on both Greece and Italy to “urgently” complete all the planned hotspots on their territory — with Greece having completed just one of five.

The criticism is certain to anger Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, who on Wednesday compared the EU to the orchestra playing on the deck of the doomed ocean liner Titanic.

Avramopoulos meanwhile also hit out at European Union members for dragging their heels on easing the refugee burden for Greece and Italy, as just 479 out of a planned 160,000 people have been relocated to other states so far.

He said he had written to EU interior ministers with a “clear and strong message” on the “very poor” figures despite a deal agreed last September.

The migration crisis has pushed key tenets of European unity such as the Schengen free travel area and the Dublin migration agreements to the brink of collapse.

The EU has pinned high hopes on the deal it signed in November with Turkey to cut migrant numbers in exchange for three billion euros ($3.2 billion) in aid and faster EU membership talks.

But the commission said Turkey must “as a matter of urgency” make “significant progress.”

AFP
Written By

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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