Author Topic: Migrants to be sent back to Turkey starting Sunday  (Read 370 times)

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Offline EC

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Migrants to be sent back to Turkey starting Sunday
« on: March 19, 2016, 08:28:05 am »
European Union leaders approved a controversial deal with Turkey on Friday intended to halt illegal migration flows to Europe in return for financial and political rewards for Ankara, but deep doubts remain about whether it is legal or workable.

The accord aims to close the main route over which a million migrants and refugees poured across the Aegean Sea to Greece before marching north to Germany and Sweden in the last year.

After a morning of talks with Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, European Council President Donald Tusk recommended that the 28 EU member states approve the text without changes and they rapidly agreed at a summit lunch in Brussels.

“Agreement with Turkey approved. All illegal migrants who arrive to Greece from Turkey starting March 20 will be returned!” Czech Prime Minister Bohuslav Sobotka tweeted from inside the meeting.

A senior EU official said Davutoglu had indicated Ankara would accept the proposal if the EU leaders approved it. He was expected to join the EU leaders for a formal session soon.

Under the pact, Ankara would take back all illegal migrants who cross to Greece, including Syrians, in return for the EU taking in thousands of Syrian refugees directly from Turkey and rewarding it with more money, early visa-free travel and progress in its EU membership negotiations.

Migrants who arrive in Greece from Sunday will be subject to being sent back to Turkey once they are registered and their asylum claim is processed. A senior Turkish official said the returns would begin on April 4 and the resettlement of Syrian refugees in Europe would begin simultaneously.

The EU also agreed to accelerate disbursement of 3 billion euros already pledged in support for refugees in Turkey and to provide a further 3 billion by 2018 once Ankara came up with a list of projects that qualified for EU assistance.

While the talks were in progress, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan accused the EU of hypocrisy over migrants, human rights and terrorism after supporters of the separatist Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) set up protest tents near the summit venue.

Erdogan said Europe was “dancing in a minefield” by directly or indirectly supporting terrorist groups.

“At a time when Turkey is hosting three million, those who are unable to find space for a handful of refugees, who in the middle of Europe keep these innocents in shameful conditions, must first look at themselves,” he said in a televised speech.

Read more: http://www.france24.com/en/20160318-eu-turkey-approve-deal-return-migrants
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rangerrebew

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Re: Migrants to be sent back to Turkey starting Sunday
« Reply #1 on: March 19, 2016, 08:42:20 am »

EU agrees deal to forcibly return asylum seekers to Turkey
#Refugees

Aid groups say the deal, to come into effect on Sunday, is 'ugly and illegal'
Asylum seekers will be forcibly returned from Europe to Turkey starting 20 March (AFP)
 
Friday 18 March 2016 02:16 UTC
Last update:
Saturday 19 March 2016 8:14 UTC
 
EU and Turkish officials have agreed a deal that will see hundreds of thousands of asylum seekers returned to Turkey in exchange for accelerated accession to the EU after hours of crunch talks in Brussels on Friday.

Asylum seekers will begin being forcibly returned from Europe to Turkey from 20 March, a spokesperson for European Council chief Donald Tusk told Sky News.

All 28 EU member states have agreed to the terms of the final deal set out by Tusk, an EU official told the Financial Times.

The exact terms of the deal have not been made public.

The announcement follows tense negotiations between officials hoping to clinch a deal to tackle the continent's worst refugee crisis since World War II.

In the early hours of Friday morning European leaders finally agreed on a common position to put to Turkey's prime minister over a breakfast meeting in Brussels later in the day.

The 28 states spent the day haggling over the proposal, under which Turkey would take all refugees and migrants from Greece, helping curb an unprecedented influx of 1.2 million people from Syria and elsewhere since 2015.

A senior EU official said it was "not a deal but a common position" to allow negotiations on a final text with the Turkish premier.

But the deal comes at a heavy price for the EU including an acceleration of Turkey's long-stalled bid for membership of the union, billions of euros in extra aid and visa-free travel, amid deep concerns over Ankara's human rights record.

Hours into the talks, an EU official told AFP correspondent Danny Kemp that "serious sticking points" remained: the legality of the deal, which some member states have questioned, EU accession and how the deal will be funded.

As he boarded a Brussels-bound plane in Ankara on Friday morning, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu had described the proposed deal as "clear and honest" but added: "Turkey will never become an open prison for migrants."

Doctors Without Borders, which provides health services for people injured during the risky Aegean Sea crossing to Europe, has strongly condemned the deal as "ugly and illegal".
'Edge of international law'

The refugee crisis has left Europe increasingly divided, with fears that its Schengen passport-free zone could collapse as states reintroduce border controls and concerns over the rise of populist parties on anti-immigration sentiment.

European leaders voiced caution about whether they can finally seal the deal with Turkey, which has been trying to join the EU for decades.

Tusk said earlier he was "cautiously optimistic but frankly, more cautious than optimistic" while German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned there were "many things to resolve".

Other EU leaders voiced worries that the deal - under which the EU would take in one Syrian refugee from Turkish soil in exchange for every Syrian taken back by Turkey from Greece - would be illegal.

The aim of the "one-for-one" deal is allegedly to encourage Syrians to apply for asylum in the EU while they are still on Turkish soil, instead of taking dangerous smugglers' boats across the Aegean Sea.

Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite said the plan was "very complicated, will be very difficult to implement and is on the edge of international law".

Belgian premier Charles Michel evoked concerns over Turkey's rights record and its conflict with Kurdish separatists, adding: "I can't accept negotiations which sometimes look like they are a form of blackmail."

Over dinner, Tusk presented changes to the deal such as a mention that the UNHCR must be involved in deporting people, that women and children should form the bulk of those taken under the "one-for-one" scheme and that all asylum applications must be dealt with individually, EU officials said.

The new draft also mentioned that an additional three billion euros in aid for refugees in Turkey would be conditional on the initial three billion euros from the November deal with Ankara being spent first.
Cyprus problem

One major hurdle that appeared to have been overcome was opposition from Cyprus, rooted in its long-standing tensions with Turkey over Ankara's refusal to recognise its government on the divided island.

Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades indicated he could be ready to "compromise" on his objections to the EU opening new "chapters" in Turkey's accession process after earlier threatening to block the entire deal.

The deal also envisages major aid for Greece, where tens of thousands of refugees are trapped in dire conditions after Balkan countries shut their borders to stop them heading north to richer Germany and Scandinavia.

It says the EU will also help it deal with the huge logistical burden of ensuring asylum seekers on the Greek islands are registered and processed before being returned to Turkey.
Jolie and Ai Wewei at Idomeni

Highlighting global attention on the issue, Hollywood star and UNHCR goodwill ambassador Angelina Jolie on Thursday visited the island of Lesbos, the principal port of entry for migrants to Europe.

Meanwhile in the bleak camp of Idomeni on the Macedonian-Greek border, Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei on Thursday had his hair cut by a migrant barber to draw attention to their plight.
- See more at: http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/eu-agrees-migration-deal-position-put-turkey-545791271#sthash.i5evHUqy.dpuf