Steinmeier warns against associating refugees with terrorists, but calls for measures to strengthen EU security

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier in New York on December 18, 2015 (Jewel Samad/AFP)
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier in New York on December 18, 2015 (Jewel Samad/AFP)

 

Europe must gain stronger control of its borders in light of the massive influx of refugees entering EU nations and the danger of jihadists entering the continent as well, Germany’s foreign minister said Saturday.

According to Reuters, Frank-Walter Steinmeier said that while it was wrong to conflate refugees with terrorists, “it is important that we have more control again over who is entering and leaving Europe.”

He said plans to boost the EU’s Frontex border agency, as well as efforts to incentivize Turkey to curtail the flow of migrants, were steps in the right direction.

Earlier this week Czech Prime Minister Bohuslav Sobotka accused Germany of touching off a wave of illegal immigration by opening its borders to refugees.

In a newspaper interview Wednesday, Sobotka told Germany’s daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung that countries like his were paying the price for Berlin’s decision in September and said Prague would continue to resist pressure to take in more asylum seekers.

“Germany sent a message that could be heard and seen in far reaches of the Middle East and North Africa,” he was quoted as saying.

This move “encouraged illegal migration to Europe, that unfortunately cannot be denied,” he added.

“Germany gave top priority to the humanitarian aspects of the crisis, above questions of security.”

Sobotka said the European Union’s 28 member states must retain the power to determine their own immigration policy.

“We reject pressure for a centrally organized migration policy that only strengthens the radicals and can harm the European idea,” he said.

Migrants and refugees walk towards the border with Serbia, while a migrant who was not allowed to cross into Serbia, sleeps on the ground near the village of Tabanovce, in northern Macedonia, November 19, 2015. (AP/Boris Grdanoski)
Migrants and refugees walk towards the border with Serbia, while a migrant who was not allowed to cross into Serbia, sleeps on the ground near the village of Tabanovce, in northern Macedonia, November 19, 2015. (AP/Boris Grdanoski)

 

Sobotka said a permanent EU-wide distribution program for refugees, as backed by countries such as Germany and France, would be doomed to failure.

“The system wouldn’t work — it cannot be realized against the will and the wishes of refugees themselves” where they would choose to settle.

Sobotka said nevertheless that Prague would stand by its pledge to accept refugees under an EU program to place 160,000 asylum seekers throughout the bloc — a scheme rejected by Slovakia and Hungary.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel decided in the late summer to stop expelling Syrian refugees and in September agreed with Austria to let in tens of thousands of migrants who were stuck in Hungary, which rejected asylum requests.

The moves were followed by a surge in asylum seekers from Turkey to Greece and then up through the Balkans to Hungary, Austria, Germany and northern Europe.

Germany expects around one million asylum seekers this year.

As reported by The Times of Israel