EU members
were pressuring Greece
to better monitor the bloc’s external border
The Wall
Street Journal
By
VALENTINA POP
Updated
Dec. 3, 2015 5:03 p.m. ET
1 COMMENTS
Under
pressure from EU governments, including a veiled suggestion that it could be
suspended from the Schengen passport-free zone, Greece agreed to three steps to
better handle incoming migrants, including assistance from the EU Border
Agency, the European Commission said.
The
statement late Thursday came ahead of a meeting of interior ministers here
Friday that was set to pressure Greece
to better monitor the bloc’s external borders.
The EU’s
executive body said Athens also agreed to a plan
with the EU border agency Frontex to deploy border guards from other EU
countries at its northern frontier with Macedonia
to help register migrants seeking to head toward Northern
Europe .
In a major
concession, Athens
also made a formal request to Frontex to help it deal with the situation on
Greek islands, where a majority of migrants into the EU now land. The
commission said more than 50,000 people have arrived in Greece since Nov. 1, most by sea from Turkey .
At Friday’s
meeting of interior ministers, Greece
was expected to face growing pressure to deliver on promises to better monitor
the bloc’s external borders and register migrants, including the possibility
that it could be temporarily suspended from the EU’s Schengen zone.
The
terrorist attacks in Paris last month, which
left at least 130 people dead, have put further focus on Europe ’s
porous borders. Two of the attackers traveled with Syrian passports, entering
Europe via the Greek island
of Leros , where they were
registered.
The
attention on Greece comes
after EU leaders sealed a deal with neighboring Turkey late last month on cracking
down on people smugglers and stemming the migrant influx. Greece is the first Schengen zone country that
migrants reach by boat or land from Turkey .
More than
800,000 people have reached Europe via Turkey
this year, with most of them continuing their journey unhindered into the
Balkan nations in what has become a de facto corridor to Germany and Sweden .
In Brussels , diplomats have for months vented frustration
over what they see as Greece ’s
reluctance to accept EU help in the form of border guards, asylum experts and
registration machines. Greece
has said that, in some cases, promised EU help hasn't been delivered.
The crisis
has raised fears for the future of borderless travel in the 26-country Schengen
zone, with several—notably Germany ,
Austria and Sweden —reintroducing
border checks.
A
discussion paper prepared for the meeting by the Luxembourg government, seen by
The Wall Street Journal, made a veiled reference to a yet-untested procedure by
which a country failing to protect the bloc’s external border can be put under
increased scrutiny for a few months and, if it fails to secure the border, be
temporarily suspended from the Schengen zone.
The
procedure floated in the paper refers to the Schengen Border Code, which
describes a situation when one country is “seriously neglecting its obligations
to control the external border.” That means it would be put under increased
scrutiny. If after three months, the situation persisted, other Schengen
countries could decide to reintroduce border controls on travelers from that
country—a de facto suspension.
An EU
program to take in refugees—which should have a total of 160,000 asylum seekers
relocated from Italy , Greece and possibly Sweden
to other countries—so far has succeeded in moving only 30 people out of Greece to Luxembourg .
The
mandatory system was imposed by a majority of EU interior ministers who
outvoted Hungary , Slovakia , the Czech
Republic and Romania .
—Nektaria
Stamouli in Athens and Margit Feher in Budapest contributed to
this article.
Write to
Valentina Pop at valentina.pop@wsj.com
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