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19 February 2016
EU heads of state and government agreed to ‘rapidly stem the flows’ of refugees and
migrants, protect the EU’s external borders, reduce illegal [sic] migration and
safeguard the integrity of the Schengen area, during their Council summit in Brussels
on 18-19 February.
Conclusions on Turkey remain quite vague, but Donald Tusk, President of the EU
Council announced that there will be an extraordinary meeting with Turkey early
March. EU home affairs ministers are also due to meet before the EU leaders meet
again mid-March. Meanwhile, they call on Turkey to prevent people from irregularly
crossing into Greece.
“The full and speedy implementation of the EU-Turkey Action Plan remains a priority,
in order to stem migration flows and to tackle traffickers and smugglers networks.
Steps have been taken by Turkey to implement the Action Plan, notably as regards
access by Syrian refugees to Turkey’s labour market and data sharing with the EU.
However, the flows of migrants arriving in Greece from Turkey remain much too high.
We need to see a substantial and sustainable reduction of the number of illegal
entries from Turkey into the EU. This calls for further, decisive efforts also on the
Turkish side to ensure effective implementation of the Action Plan,” they conclude.
In an interview with the EU Reporter, ECRE Secretary General Catherine Woollard
urged all parts of Europe to fully assume their responsibilities for ensuring protection
of refugees. She said closing borders was not a solution, nor deporting people back to
Turkey, where fundamental rights of refugees and migrants are not protected and
access to labour market and education is limited for refugees.
“The concrete measures we would like to see, firstly, we need to see a stop to the
building of fences. This doesn’t act as a disincentive, given that people are fleeing
from an ultra-violent conflict that shows no signs of abating. Secondly, the only real
solution here is a large-scale resettlement, and that would allow people to come
directly to Europe rather to having to use the deadly sea routes, as is currently the
case. Last year, around 4,000 people died in Europe’s seas and this will continue,” she
said in the interview.
This article appeared in the ECRE Weekly Bulletin of 19 February 2016. You can
subscribe to the Weekly Bulletin here.
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