WORLD / EUROPE
EU needs system of ‘mandatory’ solidarity on migration: commissioner
Published: Sep 20, 2020 05:33 PM

Migrants prepare tea near a new makeshift camp on the island of Lesbos, Greece on Tuesday. Roughly 800 of the thousands of asylum seekers who fled a fire that destroyed Europe's biggest migrant camp have been housed at a temporary site on the island of Lesbos, Greece's migration ministry said. Photo: AFP



The EU home affairs commissioner, who is to unveil a much-awaited asylum reform next week, urged Saturday that a system of "mandatory" solidarity on migration be agreed between member states.

"It has to be mandatory, all member states have to help when there is a situation when a member state is under pressure, when there is a lot of people that need protection," Ylva Johansson told AFP.

"But we also need to take into account the kind of help" needed, she noted, as some of the 27 EU nations remain hostile to accepting asylum seekers.

In recent years, attempts to relocate asylum seekers within the EU have been rejected by the so-called Visegrad group - Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic and Slovakia. 

"It's not only relocation, it could also be other situations like for example helping with returns" of those whose asylum requests have been refused to their home countries, she said.

Johansson declined to go into details of the new "Asylum and Migration Pact" that is to be unveiled on Wednesday, two weeks after blazes in the Greek migrant camp of Moria left thousands homeless.

The incident is seen as a symbol of EU failure to agree on a common migration policy, as some of the 12,700 migrants in the overcrowded camp had been there for years.

She recognized that finding "a proposal that can be accepted by all member states and by parliament" would be a "difficult task."

"My guess is that when I present my proposal, I will have no 'hurray, we won,'" Johansson said, hoping however that it would be seen as "a proper compromise."

EU chief Ursula von der Leyen on Wednesday said she intended to abolish the controversial Dublin Regulation under which asylum claims are handled in the country where migrants first arrive.

The rule is intended to prevent migrants from lodging multiple asylum requests, but also allows them to be sent back to the first country by another EU nation.

AFP