Austria’s migrant cap sparks fears
AUSTRIA yesterday introduced a new daily cap on asylum seekers which could trigger a domino effect of border clampdowns on the Balkan migrant trail from Greece up to northern Europe.
The move sparked anger from the European Union which hopes on sealing a pact with Turkey to stem the migration crisis at a special summit in early March.
A maximum of 80 migrants per day are now being allowed to claim asylum in Austria. Vienna is also limiting the daily number of people transiting through to seek asylum in a neighboring state to 3,200.
Brussels on Thursday slammed the “unilateral actions” as “incompatible with European Union law.”
Instead European Union leaders, spearheaded by Germany, are supporting a deal with Ankara under which Turkey would close its borders and then fly refugees to Europe for resettlement under a quota.
“We agreed that our joint action plan with Turkey remains a priority and we must do all we can to succeed,” European Council President Donald Tusk said early yesterday at a two-day EU summit.
Big rifts have opened up in the 28-member bloc as the continent grapples with its biggest migration crisis since World War II.
Pressure to enforce the EU plan is rising as thousands of migrants and refugees are still crossing the Aegean daily from Turkey after over 1 million braved the journey last year.
Most are refugees fleeing war and violence in Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq.
However, the so-called Visegrad Four (V4) — Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary — have already rejected the EU resettlement plan.
They want Macedonia and Bulgaria to seal off their frontier with Greece, effectively excluding Athens from Europe’s passport-free Schengen zone and leaving thousands of people stranded.
Austria, which has joined the V4 in their call for tighter Schengen border controls, warned yesterday it could lower its daily cap even further.
“We need to put the brakes on,” Interior Minister Johanna Mikl-Leitner said.
Once the limits at Austria’s main border crossing with Slovenia have been reached, “the borders will be closed,” police spokesman Fritz Grundnig said yesterday morning.
However, “not a single migrant has arrived since yesterday (afternoon) and we don’t expect any to arrive today because of the bad weather,” he added.
The daily limit on asylum claims is in line with Austria’s announcement last month that it would only take in 37,500 asylum seekers this year — sharply down from the 90,000 it accepted in 2015, making it one of the bloc’s highest recipients on a per-basis capita.
Like the V4 bloc, Vienna wants to see the number of asylum seekers arriving from Turkey to drop from as many as 2,000 a day to just a few dozens.
Last year we had “more asylum requests than Italy and much more than France. And everyone who looked at a map knows that these two countries are much bigger than Austria and have more inhabitants as well,” Austrian Chancellor Werner Faymann said on Thursday in Brussels.
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