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EU leaders press Turkey to curb migrant flow

By AFP - Feb 18,2016 - Last updated at Feb 18,2016

BRUSSELS — European Union leaders meeting in Brussels on Thursday piled pressure on Turkey to curb the flow of migrants to Europe in line with an aid-for-cooperation deal signed last year.

Pressure to enforce the deal is growing as EU officials say thousands of migrants are still crossing the Aegean daily from Turkey after more than 1 million made the perilous journey last year in the greatest such movement since World War II.

Netherlands Prime Minister Mark Rutte, whose government holds the rotating presidency of the EU, said he hoped NATO's announcement last week that it would start naval patrols in the Aegean Sea could make a difference.

"This should lead to having the influx under control, so that when the spring arrives we do not have the numbers that we had last year," said Rutte.

The latest draft summit conclusions, a copy of which was obtained by AFP, calls for "the full and speedy implementation" of the plan agreed by the EU and Turkey in November last year despite some progress by Ankara.

"The flows of migrants arriving in Greece from Turkey remain much too high," it said. 

Strengthening the language from earlier drafts, it added: "We need to see a substantial and sustainable reduction of the number of illegal entries from Turkey into the EU."

The conclusions called for results on the migration crisis in general by the time of the March summit, adding "further orientations have to be fixed and choices made".

Central Europe pressure 

The EU leaders also welcomed the "willingness of some member states to participate in a voluntary humanitarian admission programme with Turkey".

An EU diplomat told AFP the programme referred to plans by a core group of EU countries dubbed the "coalition of the willing" that offer to resettle refugees directly from camps in Turkey over strong opposition elswhere, including in eastern Europe.

A planned meeting of 11 countries including Austria and Germany with Turkey was cancelled late Wednesday after Turkey's premier pulled out following a bomb attack in Ankara.

Central European countries said on Wednesday they would push for further border restrictions in Europe's passport-free Schengen zone unless they see results from Turkey.

"If in mid-March the... influx of 1,500-2,000 people a day continues, it will be clear that Turkey has failed to meet its promises and we will need a different way to protect the European border," Tomas Prouza, the Czech state secretary for EU affairs, said on Wednesday.

 

A Central European diplomat told journalists that "it needs to drop to tens or hundreds per day maximum".

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