Erdogan
Set to Flood Europe With Millions of Migrants as EU Refugee Deal
Falters
The
European Commission is set to release a report finding that Turkey’s
human rights practices failed to comply with the terms of the deal –
a finding that would end all hope of Turkish citizens receiving
visa-free travel and likely forcing Erdogan to open the floodgates
27
August, 2016
The
diplomatic row between the European Union and Turkey has erupted with
Brussels scrambling in desperation to rescue the controversial
migrant deal with Ankara before Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan unleashes millions of asylum seekers on Europe.
The Erdogan government became enraged after a
senior European official claimed that Turkey is not committed to
doing what is necessary to join the 28-nation bloc and that its
residents should be denied visa-free travel within the EU as was
initially agreed upon by the two parties.
The spat between Turkish
officials and the European Union comes at a time when Europe
desperately needs to preserve the migrant deal.
The Erdogan
government has made it no secret that in the event that the two
parties cannot agree to terms, Turkey will open the floodgates
allowing millions of refugees residing in refugee camps to rush into
the European Union through Greece.
That scenario seems increasingly
likely with the EU Commission planning to deliver a report
documenting Turkey’s lack of progress towards delivering on terms
stipulated in the migrant pact including liberalizing policies
towards dissent – an issue that falls in stark contradiction to
Turkey’s post-coup purge that has seen nearly 100,000 individuals
removed from the civil sector and tens of thousands arrested on
suspicion of involvement in the coup plot.
Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim
signaled that Ankara expects its residents to receive visa-free
travel into the EU’s Schengen Zone beginning in October based on
actions Ankara has taken in fulfillment of the refugee agreement, but
the EU Commission report is expected to say that Turkey has fallen
short of their commitments.
Erdogan has said that if Brussels denies
Turkish citizens visa-free travel by October then he will retaliate
by withdrawing border guards allowing millions of migrants to flood
into Europe. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu reiterated the
position that Ankara will refuse to cooperate in addressing Europe’s
migration crisis unless visa-free travel materializes.
"We all
should implement all three of these agreements. It’s not right to
say: 'Let’s implement the deal that favors the EU, but not the one
favorable to Turkey.' It’s not fair," said Cavusoglu. "Unless
a date is given for visa-free travel, we will not implement new
mechanisms, such as the readmission deal."
Last month German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter
Steinmeier effectively sealed the fate of the deal by saying that
there was "no basis" for talks between Turkey and the
European Union in light of the major human rights abuses perpetrated
by the Erdogan regime during the purge.
The deal called for all
migrants travelling to Greece to be returned across the Aegean Sea
into the care of Turkish migrant camps. The EU agreed to take one
Syrian from migrant camps in Turkey for every one sent back with
Europe having the option of selecting those refugees who have work
skills that meet the needs of the European economy.
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