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HomeNewsPoland and Hungary block EU statement on migration – DW – 10/06/2023

Poland and Hungary block EU statement on migration – DW – 10/06/2023

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Skip next section Poland formally rejects migration declaration

October 6, 2023

Poland formally rejects migration declaration

At the end of the summit in Granada, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said Warsaw had rejected a joint statement on migration.

Instead, the collective communication would only address the other issue on the agenda, namely the bloc’s possible expansion.

“As a responsible politician, I reject the whole paragraph of summit conclusions regarding migration,” Morawiecki wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

https://p.dw.com/p/4XDZO

Skip next section Migration deal still possible, says Macron

October 6, 2023

Migration deal still possible, says Macron

French President Emmanuel Macron said Friday that even though Poland and Hungary had rallied against the EU’s migration policy, this did not mean a final pact on the issue was not plausible.

“They [Warsaw and Budapest] expressed, around the table, their disagreement, which they have already expressed at a ministerial level, but it is not of a nature to block a decision which would be done by a qualified majority,” said Macron at a news conference after the meeting in Granada.

https://p.dw.com/p/4XDX1

Skip next section EU ponders mission to reduce migrant crossings from Tunisia

October 6, 2023

EU ponders mission to reduce migrant crossings from Tunisia

The EU is considering expanding a military deployment in the Mediterranean Sea to curtail crossings by migrant boats from Tunisia, the bloc’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said in Granada on Friday.

Operation Irini is currently deployed to keep an eye on an arms embargo against Libya. However, it is also intended to contribute to the fight against people smuggling and human trafficking by collecting intelligence.

Tunisia has become a popular sending-off point for refugees from other parts of Africa, while en route to Europe.

Upon arrival at the summit in Andalusia, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen called for more agreements with countries outside the bloc, such as the accord recently struck with Tunisia, to reduce the number of arrivals.

Tunisia: New crossroads for sub-Saharan migration to Europe

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https://p.dw.com/p/4XDCk

Skip next section EU figures show sharp increase in irregular migrant returns

October 6, 2023

EU figures show sharp increase in irregular migrant returns

As European leaders meet with migration reform a major issue dividing them, the bloc circulated figures on Friday showing a 29% rise in irregular migrant returns in the second quarter of 2023, compared to the same period a year before.

A total of 26,600 people were returned, while the number ordered to leave rose by 9% to 105,865.

By the end of August, EU member states were hosting almost 4.2 million Ukrainian refugees, around half of whom were in Germany and Poland. 

https://p.dw.com/p/4XCzQ

Skip next section Orban reiterates migration stance

October 6, 2023

Orban reiterates migration stance

Leaders of the EU’s 27 nations are grappling with the issue of migration in Granada, just two days after the bloc’s ambassadors agreed a reform package strongly opposed by Hungary and Poland.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, an outspoken critic of migration to the bloc, reiterated his stance as he arrived at the summit in southern Spain.

The migration reforms, which oblige states to take in a share of migrants or pay the countries that do, prompted a stinging rebuke from Orban.

Orban expressed his anger by likening the recent agreement to being “legally raped.”

“Poland and Hungary were not satisfied with the proposal… so after this, there’s no chance of having any kind of compromise and agreement on migration. Politically, it’s impossible … because legally we were — how to say it — we were raped,” he added.

With Poland holding a general election next week, its populist government said the bloc’s plans to overhaul the rules on asylum seekers and irregular migrants as a “diktat” from Brussels and Berlin.

“I will tell the session today that Poland squarely rejects that, first and foremost because of the security of our country,” Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said.

Hungary: Secret service snoops into EU businesses

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https://p.dw.com/p/4XBwd

Skip next section Scholz urges caution over EU expansion

October 6, 2023

Scholz urges caution over EU expansion

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said EU states have to address various financial dilemmas related to introducing new members.

EU nations pay into a common budget, some of which is redistributed to benefit economically struggling regions.

“Everyone knows that it cannot remain the case that all countries that receive net payments today can count on this being the case in the future,” Scholz said, as he arrived at the summit in Spain.

“They will have to contribute to financing the economic growth processes in the accession countries,” he added.

Farmers across the bloc receive subventions from the budget. Should Ukraine with its significant agricultural sector join the bloc, all EU states could be impacted.

While Brussels remains steadfast in its support of Ukraine as it continues to fend off Russia’s full-scale invasion of the country, the topic of how and when the war-torn nation will join the bloc is more complex.

Within days of Russia launching an assault on Ukraine in February 2022, the EU stated its support for the notion of Kyiv joining the bloc.

Though she supports Ukraine’s ascension to the bloc, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has called for patience.

The EU’s newest member, Croatia, joined in 2013, a formal process which was a decade in the making.

EU pledges lasting support for Ukraine at Kyiv meeting

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https://p.dw.com/p/4XBrf

Skip next section What is on the agenda?

October 6, 2023

What is on the agenda?

European Union leaders reconvene in southern Spain on Friday to discuss a number of contentious issues.

Ukraine’s accession to the bloc is on the agenda, as is the manner of reducing the bloc’s reliance on non-EU countries when it comes to digital technologies.

But perhaps the thorniest topic will be how to handle migration, with the bloc coming under fire recently for outdated policies toward refugees trying to enter EU countries.

Also on the agenda is how can the EU can reduce its reliance on countries outside the bloc — namely China — when it comes green and digital technologies.

In a letter to EU leaders before the summit, European Council President Charles Michel said Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine had prompted Brussels to build a more robust economic base, and once less dependent on non-EU countries.

Michel said the meeting in Granada would offer a chance to define a strategy to ensure EU’s resilience and competitiveness in a challenging geopolitical environment.

The summit in Spain will help steer discussions in the coming months on European Commission proposals that could lead to tighter control of exports and outflows of technologies, particularly those that could be put to military use.

Of particular concern is the bloc’s economic security linked to advanced semiconductors, artificial intelligence, quantum technology and biotechnology.

jsi/kb (AP, Reuters, dpa, AFP)

https://p.dw.com/p/4XBqh

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