Diplomat: The Commission would never announce that Schengen is over!

Ahead of an emergency European Union summit with Turkey on Monday, the EU executive announced the first payouts from a 3 billion euro fund to help it cope with the roughly 2.5 million Syrian migrants on Turkish soil.

It also said Turkey was making progress towards achieving eagerly sought visa liberalisation for its citizens in the EU. In return, Brussels is demanding that Ankara crack down on people smuggling and take back all illegal migrants who do not qualify for asylum in the 28-nation EU.

Meeting in Paris, the leaders of Germany and France agreed that refugees fleeing war in Syria should stay in the region and said their common objective was to put Europe’s frayed Schengen passport-free travel agreement back into operation.

Our efforts are not done yet,” Chancellor Angela Merkel told a joint news conference with President Francois Hollande. “I understand that Turkey also expects Europe to deliver.” Merkel pressed for Monday’s summit with Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu in an effort to show results before three regional elections on March 13 in which her conservatives face losses to the anti-migration Alternative for Germany party.

Europe’s most prized achievements

European Council President Donald Tusk, who will chair the summit, was meeting Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara on Friday to press him for decisive action to stop the unbroken flow of migrants into Greece.

Eight EU countries have temporary, emergency border controls in place now to control the flow of migrants, putting in jeopardy one of Europe’s most prized achievements. More than 1.2 million people submitted asylum requests in the 28-nation EU last year, including 363,000 Syrians and 178,000 Afghans, the EU statistics agency Eurostat said.

Some 442,000 applications were submitted in Germany, the top destination for refugees and migrants, followed by 174,000 in Hungary, which erected barbed-wire fences and used security forces to shut people out, and 156,000 in Sweden, it said.

Stockholm, long regarded as the most generous EU state towards refugees, said it would scrap payments of daily allowances to migrants whose asylum applications were rejected in its latest attempt to curtail the influx.

Common European solution

Fewer than one-fifth of Germans believe the EU will agree on a common approach to the refugee crisis, according to a poll published by the daily Die Welt, and some 48% want Berlin to improve protection of Germany’s national borders. A clear majority – 56%- said Germany should cut its EU contributions if Monday’s refugee summit fails.

While Brussels and Berlin are pushing for a European response to the crisis, more and more EU states are sceptical it could work and are resorting to unilateral steps.

The Commission would never announce that Schengen is over,” one Brussels-based diplomat from an EU country said. “That would be a major political blow to them, the first real setback in the whole process of European integration. It would be like the pope announcing there is no God.”

On its part, Germany is committed to finding a common European solution to the refugee crisis and cooperating with Turkey to limit the flow of refugees and migrants to the EU, government deputy spokesperson Christiane Wirtz said on Friday, commenting on the upcoming EU summit on Monday. 

Wirtz said that during the summit, the leaders of member-states will first meet with Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu to discuss how to progress the EU-Turkey action plan, which will be followed by a meeting of the European Council to discuss the refugee crisis, the situation in Greece and how to assist the country.  

 

Source: Reuters/ANA-MPA

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