Deutsche Welle
Germany will stick to
its multifaceted response to Europe's refugee crisis, including aid delivered
via Turkey, Chancellor Angela Merkel has told parliament. She's also backed the
idea of a no-fly zone in northern Syria.
Merkel, in an address
to Germany's Bundestag on the eve of a two-day Brussels summit, said Europe
should work to improve the lives of refugees in Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan as
the way to meet "our goal" of reducing migrant flows into Europe.
She described as
"intolerable" the situation for besieged civilians in and around
northern Syria's war-torn hub of Aleppo, saying "nothing should be left
undone" in trying to establish a no-fly zone to save "many human
lives."
Washington has long
rejected the idea, fearing it could draw US forces into Syria's civil war.
Moscow on Tuesday warned that obtaining consent from Damascus and UN Security
Council approval could end up being lengthy.
Merkel reiterated in her
government statement to parliament on Wednesday her view that Europe must
concentrate on ameliorating the causes of refugee flight from Syria, saying it
was worthwhile to "continue going down this path."
Germany would make a
"significant contribution" as part of the 11 million euros ($12.2
million) in humanitarian aid pledges given at a recent donors' conference in
London, she said.
The UN's World Food
Program must not again be forced to reduce its handouts to refugees, which last
year had been one of the reasons that refugees headed to Europe, she said.
Fence will bring
consequences
She warned Visegrad
nations wanting completion of a fence along the Macedonian-Greek border that
their move amounted to isolationism and would have wide-ranging consequences for
a Europe based on free movement, including trade in goods and services.
Refugee arrivals
amounted to a "rendezvous with globalization," Merkel said, saying
the EU "must learn to protect its maritime [external] border."
That included 900
kilometers (560 miles) of maritime frontier between Greece and Turkey, she
said, as well as Italy's Mediterranean border crossed by migrants arriving from
Libya.
European 'shambles,'
says Left
Opposition Left party
parliamentary leader Sahra Wagenknecht accused Merkel of contributing to a
"European shambles" over asylum policy.
"Whoever
seriously thought that Europe could be governed from Berlin should not be
surprised when the wind now blows in his face," Wagenknecht said.
Praise for diplomats
Chancellor Merkel
praised diplomats, including German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier,
for their efforts to establish a ceasefire in Syria coupled with humanitarian
deliveries.
Durable diplomacy was
needed despite setbacks, she said.
"Despite all the
critical findings in surveys, more than 90 percent [of German voters] say as
they did before, that whoever has to flee terror, war or persecution, should
have the possiblity to be admitted into Germany and to find shelter. I think
that's wonderful," she said.
Reacting to lingering
criticism of the German government's decision last September to keep its border
open to refugees, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker firmly
backed Merkel in an interview with mass circulation newspaper "Bild"
on Wednesday.
Merkel would
"outlast all her critics in office," Juncker said. "It is
political leadership to say 'we can do it.' Anything else is capitulation to
the populists."
Backing also came from
Germany's Catholic bishops.
Their chairman, Cardinal
Reinhard Marx, said the federal government was doing much to ensure that
refugees were given shelter and this political stance should not be called into
question, Marx said.
"And, the states
in all of Europe are being called upon to make their justified contribution in
the fields of refugee protection and asylum," he said.
Remain 'active' member
Merkel prefaced her
pre-summit remarks at Wednesday's Bundestag session by urging Britain to remain
an "active member" of the 28-nation European Union.
She described elements
of EU reforms to be submitted to the Brussels summit by British Prime Minister
David Cameron as "justified."
The EU, however, must
not sacrifice its fundamental principles of free movement and
non-discrimination, Merkel said.
"These principles
are not up for disposal," Merkel said, adding any change to EU treaties
would not be immediate.
ipj/kms (AP, AFP,
Phoenix)
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