Sounds to me like bribing a criminal not to commit a crime.
Germany's plan to strike EU-wide refugee-sharing deal stalls
Germany's plan to strike EU-wide refugee-sharing deal stalls
Angela
Merkel holds surprise mini-summit in Brussels with nine EU countries
after meeting EC resistance to pro-quota pact with Turkey
the Guardian,
29
November, 2015
Months
of European efforts to come up with common policies on mass
immigration unravelled on Sunday when Germany led a “coalition of
the willing” of nine EU countries taking in most refugees from the
Middle East, splitting the union formally on the issues of mandatory
refugee-sharing and funding.
An
unprecedented full EU summit with Turkey agreed a fragile pact aimed
at stemming the flow of migrants to Europe via Turkey. But the German
chancellor, Angela Merkel, frustrated by the resistance in Europe to
her policies, also convened a separate mini-summit with seven other
leaders to push a fast-track deal with the Turks and to press ahead
with a new policy of taking in and sharing hundreds of thousands of
refugees a year directly from Turkey.
The
surprise mini-summit suggested that Merkel has given up on trying to
persuade her opponents, mostly in eastern Europe, to join a mandatory
refugee-sharing scheme across the EU, although she is also expected
to use the pro-quotas coalition to pressure the naysayers into
joining later.
Merkel’s
ally on the new policy, Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the
European commission, said of the mini-summit: “This is a meeting of
those states which are prepared to take in large numbers of refugees
from Turkey legally.”
But
he added later that any such agreement would be voluntary and not
binding, while the Dutch rejected German-led calls to resettle large
numbers directly from Turkey.
The
frictions triggered by the split were instantly apparent. Donald
Tusk, the president of the European council who chaired the full
summit with Turkey, contradicted the mainly west European emphasis on
seeing Ankara as the best hope of slowing the mass migration to
Europe.
“Let
us not be naive. Turkey is not the only key to solving the migration
crisis,” said Tusk. “The most important one is our responsibility
and duty to protect our external borders. We cannot outsource this
obligation to any third country. I will repeat this again: without
control on our external borders, Schengen will become history.”
He
was referring to the 26-country free-travel zone in Europe, which is
also in danger of unravelling under the strains of the migratory
pressures and jihadist terrorism.
Juncker
said he will come up with a system for redistributing an annual
“contingent” of refugees from Turkey among the coalition of the
willing countries. Reports in Berlin put the figure at 400,000.
He
is expected to leave that until after the looming French regional
elections for fear of boosting the chances of the anti-EU,
anti-immigrant Front National of Marine Le Pen.
David
Cameron said: “This summit matters because we need a comprehensive
solution to the migrant crisis in Europe and obviously that involves
Turkey.
“Britain
will continue to play our role, which is about supporting Syrian
refugees in the refugee camps and in Turkey.
“In
terms of the discussions this afternoon, a lot of it will be about
the Schengen no borders zone that we’re not a member of. Britain in
the European Union will keep our border controls, vital to our
security that they are.”
After
the summit, Cameron held talks with Tusk on Britain’s renegotiation
with the EU. Downing Street said: “They agreed that we continue to
make good progress. While some areas are more difficult than others,
discussions are ongoing with member states to find solutions and
agree reforms in all four areas outlined in the PM’s letter to the
European Council president.
“These
discussions will continue in the coming days, including with
bilaterals between the PM and other European leaders in Paris
tomorrow, and all EU leaders will have a substantive discussion of
the UK renegotiation at next month’s European council as planned.”
From RT
Turkey
has signed an agreement with the EU at a summit in Brussels in which
the country will help stem the flow of migrants to Europe in return
for €3 billion ($3.18bn) of support and the reestablishing of talks
on EU accession.
Key points of Turkey-EU refugee deal:
1.
The EU agrees to provide "an initial" €3 billion
($3.18bn) over two years for Turkey to better cater for the needs of
2.2 million Syrian refugees in the country.
2.
The EU promises to open a new chapter in negotiations regarding
Turkey's EU ascension and to bring the country's standards in
economic and financial policies up to scratch.
3. The
EU pledges to lift visa requirements for Turkish citizens in the
Schengen zone by October 2016 once all the requirements set forth in
the EU roadmap are met
14,000 Refugees Due For Deportation From Sweden Have Vanished: "We Simply Do Not Know Where They Are"
29
November, 2015\
As
part of the just concluded "cash for refugees" deal between
the EU Turkey, the FT
adds that
not only will migrants whose asylum applications are rejected be sent
back to Turkey but that this "crackdown
on irregular migration would be complemented by a parallel programme
offering a legal route to Europe, resettling up to 500,000 Syrian
refugees directly from Turkey, Lebanon or Jordan."
The FT
adds that,
as expected, "if such an EU-wide scheme were made mandatory it
would be flatly opposed by many eastern European countries. To
avoid the proposals being blocked, Brussels and Berlin are exploring
a “voluntary” scheme with 10 countries willing to take refugees.
It is unclear whether other Schengen members would be asked to
contribute to the costs of resettlement."
But before crossing that particular bridge, which will sow even further anger, mistrust and antagonism spread among the member countries of the European "Union", a bigger question is just how will Europe track down and sequester those refugees that pose the biggest threat in the eyes of authorities, those who are already slated for deportation.
As
the following case study from Sweden proves, having once entered
Europe, Europe may have problems trying to track down the hundreds of
thousands of refugees having already found their way to the
continent.
As
Sweden's Afton
Bladet reports,
over half of all the illegal migrants slated for deportation in
Sweden have mysteriously disappeared.
The
National Border Police Section reports that of the 21,748 individuals
due to be sent home after their asylum applications were turned down,
a whopping 14,140 have simply vanished off the police radar. Around
a third, or the remaining 7,608, still live and are accounted for in
the Swedish Migration Board's premises or have indicated an address
for their own homes. It is not clear if anyone has actually tried
following up on said home address to see how many have simply made
one up.
Based
on a translation of the Swedish report by Breitbart,
some are expected to have left the country secretly, "but
the majority are thought to still be in Sweden, having fallen through
the cracks of the comprehensive welfare state."
The
local cops is brutally honest: "We
simply do not know where they are”,
said Patrik Engstrom, a spokesman for the local police.
This
is not the first time refugees have vanished from official
supervision: one month ago we reported that roughly 4,000
asylum-seekers who had initially been accomodated by the German state
of Lower Saxony had
"mysteriously disappeared."
To our knowledge they have still not been found.
Ever
the egalitarian paradise, Sweden was as concerned about labor abuse
as the current whereabouts of the refugees, and Afton Bladet noted
that a number of unscrupulous employers in the country have taken
advantage of the invisible migrants, using them as cheap labour off
the books, with no wages tax to pay or minimum wage to heed.
The
reported goes on to note that while at the start of 2015 the
migration bureau was responsible for deporting migrants who failed to
gain a visa, the rising tide of migration created new challenges and
the job was transferred to the Police in October. The task of
deportations was handed over to police because the migration board
considered that as the situation deteriorated, “coercion would be
necessary” to get migrants to leave. Yet through a severe lack of
manpower, resources, and political mandate to take proper action the
police have proven unable to handle the job.
Now,
even the police is proving helpless at managing the process: "a
police spokesman said they simply did not have enough officers,
having been ordered this month to become border police as well,
enacting government policy to check passports and papers."
"We
have failed because too much of our resources go to reintroduce
border controls at internal borders" Patrik Engstrom adds.
Hamstrung
by government policy, the border checks have also been a failure,
making no significant reduction in the number of migrants crossing
into the country daily. Officers were only permitted to make spot
checks at the border, and were forbidden to profile individuals on
the basis of their ethnicity, language spoken, or skin colour, making
effective control impossible.
Finally,
even in cases where the police manage to find illegals and send them
home, nations such as Afghanistan, Iran, Somalia, Eritrea, Lebanon,
Morocco and Libya don’t accept their own people back in many case.
In
other words, Europe has unleashed the refugee genie without much
thought for the consequences. And now that the "consequences"
have arrived and Europe is scrambling to put the genie back into the
bottle, to its amazement it has realized that the genie has mostly
vanished.
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