Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and the Czech Republic - known as
the Visegrad Group - are set to discuss border protection and the refugee
crisis. They might help Macedonia close its Greek border to migrants.
Deutsche Welle
The four Eastern European countries known for their
restrictive asylum policy are set to call for the closure of the so-called
Balkan route to migrants traveling to Western Europe, German weekly magazine
Der Spiegel reported.
The Visegrad countries - Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and the
Czech Republic - invited representatives of Bulgaria and Macedonia to their
summit in Prague on Monday. Leaders of the Visegrad states are expected to
agree on helping Macedonia to block the migrants' path at its border with
Greece, according to diplomats quoted by Der Spiegel.
"As long as a coherent European strategy is lacking, it
is legitimate for the countries along the Balkan route to protect their
borders," Slovakian Foreign Minister Miroslav Lajcak told the German
magazine. "We will help them with that."
The Visegrad Group strongly opposes German Chancellor Angela
Merkel's refugee policy. The four countries have led the criticism of efforts
to absorb asylum-seekers who have traveled north out of Greece through the
Balkan countries. Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico said Angela Merkel's refugee
policy was a mistake, deploring that she was forcing others to pay for it.
Slovakia, Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic are against
any quota system for distributing asylum seekers among EU member states. In
Miroslav Lajcak's opinion, a European quota system was the equivalent of an
invitation which would encourage even more asylum seekers to embark on a
journey to Europe.
Fear of massive backlog on the Balkan route
Right-wing Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban urged
Macedonia and Greece to follow his example and fence off their borders against
refugees.
The four Visegrad countries, as well as Greece, are EU
members and part of the free-movement Schengen area, while Macedonia is a
member of neither.
Unlike Macedonia, Greece was not invited to the Visegerad
meeting in Prague. Athens fears that Macedonia might close its border soon,
leaving thousands of refugees in Greece.
According to the UN, about 2000 people arrive in Greece
daily after having crossed the sea from Turkey in crowded boats.
Last month, Austria said it would limit the number of asylum
seekers to 37,500 in 2016, after taking in about 90,000 last year, raising
fears of a massive migrant backlog on the Balkan route if Vienna seals the
border.
das/rc (dpa, Reuters)
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