EU fails to reach refugee quotas deal

Hungary Migrants
Hungary Migrants

Afghan refugee Nafeesah, 53, from Herat, Afghanistan, is helped by her son, daughter and a volunteering doctor, after collapsing while crossing the border between Serbia and Hungary.


EU interior ministers failed to reach unanimous agreement late on Monday on a plan for binding quotas to relocate 120,000 refugees and take the strain off Greece, Italy, and Hungary, officials said.

“Yes, not everyone is on board at the moment,” Luxembourg minister Jean Asselborn told a press conference in Brussels after an emergency meeting.

He said however that there was a “large majority” in favor of the redistribution in principle, and they would return to the issue in October.

EU migration commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos added: “For our proposal on 120,000 we did not have the agreement we wanted.”

The ministers were discussing plans unveiled last week by European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker to redistribute 120,000 refugees from overstretched Greece, Italy and Hungary.

The plans face fierce opposition from many eastern European member states.

Slovak interior minister Robert Kalinak said his country, the Czech Republic and others refused to back the plan, and called for a summit of EU leaders.

“There was no consensus, several countries disagreed. It was not only us or the Czech Republic, but other countries as well,” he was quoted as saying by the Czech news agency CTK.

The ministers did formally agree however to launch a plan first proposed in May to relocate 40,000 asylum seekers from Greece and Italy over the next two years, according to quotas suggested by the Commission.

The quotas can be passed by a qualified majority, rather than unanimously, under complex EU rules but that would show a sign of disunity that the bloc can ill afford.

German interior minister Thomas de Maiziere said there was a “bitterness” over the fact that a unanimous vote was not possible on Monday, and that a majority vote would have to be held later.

EU Vice President Frans Timmermans said the “numbers (being accepted) today are much too small” and warned of the growing risk to refugees as winter draws near.


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