EU migration commissioner: ‘If Schengen collapses, it’ll be start of end of European project’

European Migration Commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos has told members of the European Parliament that the refugee crisis was “getting worse”.

Addressing the European Parliament’s civil liberties committee on January 14, Avramopoulos said that the EU’s unity was at stake amid an increase of “populism and nationalism”.

He called on EU countries to deliver on their own promises and show solidarity to each other: “If Schengen collapses, it will be the beginning of the end of the European project”.

In September 2015, MEPs backed two emergency proposals to relocate 160 000 asylum seekers from EU countries hit hardest by the arrivals of new migrants.

However, so far only 272 people have been relocated to other member states. “All member states have to play the game,” said Avramopoulos, emphasising that EU countries should not become prisoners of domestic political agendas.

MEPs also referred to the scheme’s lack of success so far. Cornelia Ernst, a German member of the GUE/NGL group, said: “How on earth can we implement anything if member states keep saying no, no, no.”

Existing EU rules concerning refugees are based on the Dublin regulations, which stipulates that asylum demands should be dealt with by the first EU country the applicant entered.

During the debate, MEPs and the commissioner generally agreed on the need to revise the legislation, a European Parliament statement said. The European Commission will propose new measures in March.

The need to better protect the EU’s external borders was another issue that was discussed in detail during the meeting. Nathalie Griesbeck, a French member of the liberal ALDE group, said the EU’s external borders needed “to be properly policed to ensure Schengen doesn’t collapse”.

The European Commission has already proposed to strengthen EU border agency Frontex in order to turn it into a body that would even be able to act in some cases without the approval of the country concerned.

The European Parliament has welcomed these plans. These proposals would also require countries outside the EU to collaborate. However, Avramopoulos said: “If third countries (meaning, non-EU countries) are not engaged, there is no hope.”

Birgit Sippel, a German member of the socialist S&D group, wondered if this co-operation was aimed at handling the refugee situation or just “to keep them there”. Green German MEP Ska Keller added that according to reports Turkey was already “pushing refugees back to Syria” as a direct consequence of its agreement with the EU.

Reception centres, also known as hotspots, are being set up in Greece and Italy to help distinguish between refugees, economic migrants and terrorists seeking to slip into Europe.

The centres receive and register those who made the crossing through measures such as fingerprinting, establishing adequate reception and promptly selecting and relocating asylum applicants.

However, it is still early days for these centres. Laura Ferrara, an Italian member of the EFDD group said:  “In Italy the hotspots are not working, the identification process is too slow.”

She said that people whose asylum requests were rejected had neither been helped nor accompanied back to the border.

Avramopoulos said the hotspots were indeed a work in progress that he himself was following, adding: “All member states have the responsibility to welcome refugees in a dignified manner.”

He said that the Commission was working on a long list of middle and long-term measures in order to create a more sustainable migration system for the future.

He said this would include substantial financial to help those who have been most affected, a revision of the blue card system and a new system for resettling asylum seekers.

In March the Commission will release its “smart borders” proposal.

(Photo of Avramopoulos: EC Audiovisual Service)

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