Merkel seeks Turkey solution to refugee crisis

ALL EARS: German Chancellor Angela Merkel speaks in the assembly room in the German Bundestag in Berlin, Germany, yesterday. The main topic of the day was the debate on refugee policy in Germany, followed by a vote on the planned asylum law reform Picture: EPA
ALL EARS: German Chancellor Angela Merkel speaks in the assembly room in the German Bundestag in Berlin,  Germany, yesterday. The main topic of the day was the debate on refugee policy in Germany, followed by a vote on the planned asylum law reform Picture: EPA

EU leaders met yesterday to try to persuade Turkey to help stem the flow of refugees towards Europe, with German chancellor Angela Merkel saying it was “unacceptable” that the short sea crossing to Greece was being controlled by people smugglers.

“We cannot organise or stem the refugee movements without working with Turkey,” Merkel declared just ahead of a summit in Brussels as she urged Europe to stand together in the face of its worst migrant crisis since World War II.

“Europe needs to show solidarity. Anything else would be a failure,” warned Merkel, travelling to Turkey this weekend.

As leaders gathered, the Greek coastguard said it had rescued more than 800 people in the Aegean Sea in the past 24 hours trying to cross from Turkey.

Meanwhile, Croatia said more than 4800 migrants had entered the EU member state on Wednesday, bringing the overall number of arrivals to nearly 175000.

The Brussels summit will focus on securing Turkey’s agreement to a plan to halt the flood of humanity seeking refuge from war and upheaval across the Middle East and North Africa, with almost 600000 people arriving in Europe so far this year.

Leaders will discuss a possible safe zone that Turkey wants to establish on its border with war-torn Syria, where many EU countries suspect Ankara has its own agenda.

The situation is made more complicated by the fact that Turkey – which has itself taken in more than two million refugees – is a long-standing EU candidate member but accession talks have stalled over its human rights record.

EU Vice-President Frans Timmermans and other senior officials arrived in Turkey on Wednesday to push for the plan, having postponed their visit after deadly suicide attacks in Ankara at the weekend.

“An agreement with – and concessions to – Turkey only make sense if it effectively reduces the influx of migrants,” European Council President Donald Tusk said as he prepared to host the summit.

European leaders hope that by helping Turkey cope with the refugees and tighten border controls, they can prevent more people risking their lives on the perilous journey to Europe.

For its part Turkey, whose President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was in Brussels last week, wants more cash and swifter moves towards visa-free travel to Europe, but rejects proposals for more refugee camps.

Erdogan also wants more EU cooperation for his fight against “terrorism”, which targets both Kurdish separatists and Islamic State jihadists.

Tusk, who visited Turkey and Jordan last month, warned the issues were complex and defied easy solutions.

“Just to give one example, Turkey is calling on us to support ... a safe zone in northern Syria whereas Russia – increasingly engaged in Syria – is openly rejecting this idea,” he said.

Turkey wants a safe area and no-fly zone in northern Syria free from both Bashar al-Assad’s forces and IS, but EU countries are “sceptical”, diplomats say, especially after Russia dramatically launched air and missile strikes to support its long-time ally.

EU leaders, mindful of the Ukraine conflict in the background, are set to warn that Moscow’s military intervention will only add to the chaos amid concerns millions more people could be forced to flee if the war continues.

“The European Council expressed its concern about the Russian attacks on the Syrian opposition and civilians, and the risk of further military escalation,” said draft summit conclusions obtained by reporters.

The draft conclusions add that there “cannot be a lasting peace” under the Assad regime, although they do not specifically state whether Assad himself can be part of a political transition.

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