Off the wire
Thousands of youths gather in European Parliament for exchanges on Europe's future  • 3rd LD: Angry protesters withdraw from Baghdad Green Zone, 58 wounded  • South African gov't to pay injured, sick miners compensation  • Confident Kenyan volleyball queens land in Puerto Rico  • Nearly two-thirds of U.S. voters say Trump, Clinton not "honest and trustworthy": poll  • China sweeps India to meet South Korea in Uber Cup final  • Kenya' s lady junior golfer to take part in British Open  • UN says over 69,000 South Sudanese refugees arrive in Sudan since January  • Red Cross lists humanitarian priorities for upcoming World Humanitarian Summit  • 2016 Thomas and Uber Cups results  
You are here:   Home

EU official disappointed about results of relocation scheme for asylum seekers

Xinhua, May 21, 2016 Adjust font size:

Efforts of EU member states' to relocate migrants in need of international protection are disappointing, according to European Union (EU) Commissioner for Migration, Home Affairs and Citizenship Dimitris Avramopoulos, who said here Friday relocation from Greece needed to happen urgently.

Avramopoulos made the remarks following a meeting of the EU's Justice and Home Affairs Council.

"So far, only 1,581 persons in need of international protection have been relocated from Greece and Italy. Tens of thousands of people continue to remain stranded in Greece and the situation on the ground will not improve in the coming months," he said, adding there was no alternative or plan B.

In the meantime, Avramopoulos said, the number of arrivals to the Greek islands continued to decrease. In addition, returns to Turkey have also increased. In parallel, the number of resettlements from Turkey continues to increase as member states finalize their assessments of applications referred to them by Turkey, via the UNHCR.

He noted the European Commission on Friday had awarded 56 million euros (63 million U.S. dollars) in emergency funding for Greece to improve the conditions of migrants and help Greek authorities register newly arriving migrants and process their asylum claims.

"But we also cannot forget about Italy where we have seen a recent rise in migratory flows. Here too, relocation is essential, as well as increasing reception capacities and increasing returns or those who have no right to stay," he said.

He said ministers during the meeting delivered on the relocation scheme fully, swiftly, and collectively. Moreover, he stressed it was essential to step-up efforts and resettle Syrian refugees under the 1-to-1 scheme with Turkey.

"The irregular migratory corridors can only end if people are offered a genuine and legal alternative," Avramopoulos said.

Under the EU-Turkey agreement struck on March 18, for every Syrian national returned from Greece to Turkey, another will be resettled to the EU directly from Turkey, a move which aims to deter migrants from traveling in dangerous conditions across the Aegean Sea by offering instead an orderly and legal resettlement process.

Based on Commission proposals, EU member states agreed last September to relocate 160,000 asylum seekers from Italy and Greece, and to assist the two countries in dealing with the pressures of the refugee crisis. Endit