miércoles, 20 de diciembre de 2023

The EU agrees on the Migration and Asylum Pact with greater border control and on-demand solidarity

 

The negotiators of the European Parliament and the Council reached an agreement on Wednesday on the Migration and Asylum Pact that will reform the common policy with greater control of the external borders of the European Union and offer governments an ‘on-demand solidarity’ to be avoided by the reception of some of the relocated migrants with alternatives such as the payment of rejected transfer compensation.

“Successful. After years of political stagnation, we have reached an agreement”, announced one of the MEPs of the negotiating team, the Dutch Christian Democrat Jeroen Lenaers, early this Wednesday, after an early morning of negotiation on the nine dossiers that make up the Pact and covering the whole process, including the strengthening of border control and identification of migrants until each file is resolved with the granting of asylum or the expulsion decision.

The presidents of the European Parliament, Roberta Metsola, and the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, agreed to point out the “historic” moment of the agreement that puts an end to years of tensions between the EU countries themselves -since the so-called ‘refugee crisis’ of 2015- and arrives in the time to complete its processing before the June European elections, a deadline that was on negotiators to prevent its development from being affected by the electoral campaign and the advance of the far right.

“It is a human approach, just with those seeking protection, firm with those who are not eligible and firm with those who exploit the most vulnerable”, Metsola said at a press conference at the end of the negotiations, accompanied by the Euro MPs.

The Commissioner for the interior, the socialist Ylva Johansson, and the community vice president in charge of migration, the ‘popular’ Margaritis Schinas, architects of the proposal presented in 2020 as the basis for negotiation, have also applauded the milestone achieved. “We have agreed on a comprehensive pact with better protection of he external border, more solidarity and better protection of the vulnerable, based on EU values”, Johansson said.

The new rules, which still need the approval of the plenary of the Eurocamera and the 27 to be formally adopted, put an end to years of hard negotiations between the Member States themselves to agree on a balance between “solidarity” with frontline countries, such as Spain and Italy, and the “responsibility” they call on these other partners in fear of secondary movements.

Finally, the solution is a mechanism of “flexible solidarity” that will force the 27 to respond to a partner overwhelmed with the arrival of migrants, or by relocating in their territory some of the people arriving, either paying compensation valued for each migrant who rejects.

The aim is to transfer at least 30,00 migrants each year, but countries will be able to refuse to receive some of those in return for compensation 20,000 euros for each rejected transfer or of means or funds of equivalent value.

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