Saturday 24 October 2015

Migrant crisis: Balkan states threaten border closures


Media captionMigrants are being escorted by Croatian authorities and "dumped" on the Slovenian border, as Richard Galpin reports

Bulgaria said it, Romania and Serbia would act if states further north, which migrants hope to reach, close their doors.
Balkan countries at the front line of the migrant crisis say they could close their borders to avoid becoming buffer zones for new arrivals.
The threat comes ahead of talks between Balkan states and EU members.
Slovenia's president said his country would "act on its own before it is too late" if no solution was reached.
Prime Minister Miro Cerar had previously refused to rule out building a fence along its border with Croatia.
The International Organization for Migration said that more than 9,000 migrants arrived in Greece every day last week - the highest rate so far this year.
Most of the migrants - including many refugees from the conflicts in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan - want to reach Germany to claim asylum.
Map showing routes being used by migrants trying to reach Austria and Germany - 19 October 2015
Germany says it expects to take in 800,000 asylum seekers this year. The procession of those seeking a route north is leading to bottlenecks in parts of southern and eastern Europe, where many countries say they lack the resources to look after new arrivals.
Bottlenecks have also been exacerbated in part by Hungary closing its borders with Serbia and Croatia, forcing migrants to seek alternative routes north.
Slovenia saw 58,000 arrivals in the week leading up to Saturday, and many people are waiting in wet and cold conditions.
While Germany has not indicated it would refuse more migrants, Bulgaria's prime minister said on Saturday that his country, Romania and Serbia would respond immediately if it did so.
"We are standing ready, if Germany and Austria close their borders, not to allow our countries to become buffer zones," Prime Minister Boiko Borisov said. "We will be ready to close borders."
Slovenia's President Borut Pahor echoed Mr Borisov's concerns, saying it "cannot become a pocket in which refugees would be stuck" if Germany and Austria refused to take migrants.
On his Facebook page, Mr Pahor said the success of the summit would be measured partly on whether stricter controls are implemented to stop migrants travelling from Turkey to Greece.
Croatian Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic said such controls were the only solution. "Everything else is a waste of time," he said.
A woman tries to warm up herself using a thermal blanket provided by volunteers after arriving on a dinghy from a Turkish coast to the northeastern Greek island of Lesbos, Saturday, Oct. 24, 2015Image copyrightAP
Image captionThe rate of people arriving on to Greek islands is at its highest this year
A man with a blanket wrapped around his head waits with other migrants and refugees to be transported to a refugee center after crossing the Croatian-Slovenian border near Rigonce, Slovenia, on October 24, 2015Image copyrightAFP/Getty Images
Image captionNight-time temperatures on the Croatia-Slovenia border dropped to close to freezing point over the weekend
The leaders of all affected countries will attend the emergency summit in Brussels.
German media say countries will be presented with a 16-point plan by European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker.
In an interview published on Sunday by the German newspaper Bild, Mr Juncker said it was crucial Balkan countries stop "passing on" migrants to neighbouring countries.
Countries "must take care to uphold orderly procedures and conditions," Mr Juncker told Bild.
Mr Milanovic dismissed Mr Juncker's plan, saying: "Whoever wrote this does not understand how things work and must have just woken up from a months'-long sleep."

Migrant crisis - Saturday developments

  • Libya's Red Crescent charity say the bodies of 40 migrants have washed up on the country's coast - most were from sub-Saharan countries - a search is under way for another 30 people believed missing
  • Slovenian police used tear gas to break up a scuffle between two groups at the Brezice migrant camp on Saturday morning
  • Austria says it expected 6,000 people to arrive from Slovenia at a registration camp on Saturday

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