Off the wire
Israeli police kills Palestinian near Jerusalem  • WFP food aid targets 850,000 Zimbabweans  • EU to open up online payments market  • First EU plane carrying Eritrean refugees to take off Friday  • French stock market index up 0.18 pct  • Foreign exchange rate of euro to other currencies  • LME base metals decrease on Thursday  • 2 students die in balloon accident in central Italy  • British FTSE 100 increases 0.61 pct on Thursday  • China, U.S. to expand military ties  
You are here:   Home

EU ministers urge increased return rates to tackle irregular migration

Xinhua, October 9, 2015 Adjust font size:

Home affairs ministers from European Union (EU) member states on Thursday urged that increased return rates should act as a deterrent to irregular migration.

"The EU and its Member States must do more in terms of return," said a conclusion document after the migration session of the regular EU justice and home affairs ministers' meeting in Luxembourg.

Noting that the EU's Return Directive had come into force since January 2009, the conclusion said that the directive should be applied in a consistent and efficient manner to ensure high uniform standards of enforcement and to maintain a high level of mutual trust among EU member states.

Moreover, the ministers agreed that tools shall be mobilized to increase cooperation on return and readmission, calling on member states, the Commission and the European External Action Service to prioritize readmission in all relevant contacts at political level with countries of origin of irregular migrants.

The conclusion said that "readmission of own nationals is an obligation under international customary law and that all States need to abide by this obligation."

The Council (of the European Union) also welcomes the Commission's intention to consider setting up Frontex Rapid Return Intervention Teams, offering support on identification, consular cooperation with third-countries, and organizing return operations for Member States, building on the hotspot experiences, said the conclusion.

"Relocation is only one part of a more comprehensive approach; effective return of those who have no right to stay is the other side of the coin and we have to become better at it," said European Commissioner in charge of migration Dimitris Avramopoulos at a press briefing on the sidelines of the meeting.

"The magnitude of the crisis makes it impossible to handle it in a fragmented and isolated manner," he said, noting that the EU can only address the ongoing refugee migration crisis if people make progress in all areas.

EU Ministers of Justice and Home Affairs were scheduled to meet from Oct. 8-9 in Luxembourg to discuss migration, visa policy and counter-terrorism issues. Home affairs ministers have discussed several issues related to migration. Endit