European states deeply divided on refugee crisis before key summit

The Guardian — Europe’s deep divide over immigration is to be laid bare at an EU summit in Brussels today (Thursday), with German chancellor Angela Merkel struggling to salvage her open-door policy while a growing number of countries move to seal borders to newcomers along the Balkan routes.

A debate on the migration crisis over dinner on Thursday evening will do little to resolve the differences, senior EU officials predict. Donald Tusk, the president of the European council, has avoided putting any new decisions on the agenda in an attempt to avoid fresh arguments.

The leaders of four anti-immigration eastern European countries met in Prague on Monday and demanded alternative EU policies by next month. Their plan amounts to exporting Hungary’s zero-immigration razor-wire model to the Balkans, sealing Macedonia’s border with northern Greece, and bottling up the vast numbers of refugees in Greece unless they are deported back to Turkey.

Merkel had been due to lead a rival meeting of leaders of 10 countries on Thursday in an attempt to invigorate a pact with Turkey, but that has been called off following the bomb attack in Ankara on Wednesday.

Merkel’s plan – trading money and refugee quotas for Ankara’s efforts to minimise the numbers crossing the Aegean to Greece – hinges on EU countries volunteering to take in quotas of refugees directly from Turkey. But even among her allies – a so-called coalition of the willing – support for the policy is fading. Austria announced much stiffer national border controls this week, saying on Wednesday it would limit the number of migrants it let in to 3,200 a day from Friday. “We must apply the brakes step by step,” interior minister Johanna Mikl-Leitner told reporters.

Vienna has also told Brussels and Balkan governments that it could close its borders within weeks. France, also part of the coalition, announced that it would not participate in any new quotas system.

“You can’t have 20 [EU] countries refusing to take in refugees,” said a European commissioner. But senior officials in Brussels admit that there is now a solid majority of EU states opposing Merkel.

In a pre-summit statement to parliament in Berlin on Wednesday, Merkel stoutly defended the policies that are under fire at home and across Europe. Despite the problems, she said, 90% of Germans continued to support taking in people fleeing war, terror and persecution. “I think that’s wonderful,” Merkel said.

Her speech dwelt overwhelmingly on the faltering pact with Turkey, struck in November. Ahmet Davutoglu, the Turkish prime minister, was to attend the mini-summit in Brussels, but cancelled his trip on Wednesday following an apparent terror attack in Ankara. The issue at the EU summit, Merkel said, will be whether to press ahead with the Turkey pact or whether to concentrate on the closed scenario of more fences and quarantining Greece.

Internal German government reports, according to the magazine Der Spiegel, predict a security and humanitarian emergency within days in Greece if it is cut off from the Schengen free-travel zone and refugees are stopped from continuing up the Balkans.

Greece remains in the firing line because of its inability  to secure the maritime border with Turkey. It has been given three months by Brussels to improve its performance or face possible temporary eviction from Schengen.

The summit will warn Athens that failed or unregistered asylum-seekers entering Greece have to be returned immediately to Turkey. But Tusk, chairing the EU summit, spoke strongly on Tuesday against quarantining Greece.

Germany, Austria and others have reimposed partial national border controls in the Schengen area and want to retain the option to extend that to two years in May. In order to do so, Brussels has to rule that Schengen’s external borders are inadequately secured, meaning that Greece will be the scapegoat.

“There is no issue of isolating Greece,” said a senior EU official. “The external border is in Greece and will remain in Greece.”

Several countries, including the eastern European states, both believe and hope that Merkel’s pact with Turkey will fail and that by the spring, when the refugee flows are almost certain to rise, their arguments will prevail.

“Relying simply on Turkey to deliver is not enough,” said a senior eastern European diplomat. “[FYRO]Macedonia  cannot cope with the flux.”