German Chancellor
Angela Merkel called on Saturday for better protection at the European
Union's external borders in order to maintain the passport-free Schengen
zone. Merkel, who
opened her country's borders to Syrians fleeing civil war last summer,
is under increasing pressure to limit the influx of migrants after more
than a million arrived in Germany last year. A
poll published this week showed popular support for Merkel had tumbled
to a four-and-a-half-year low with more than 80 percent of Germans
doubting her government had the refugee crisis under control. "We need to protect our external borders because we want to keep Schengen," Merkel said in her weekly podcast. Failing to protect
the EU's external borders would jeopardize free movement of people which
is the basis for the bloc's wealth, Merkel added. In
particular, the protection of external borders is not turning out very
well where the EU has sea borders, she said, referring indirectly to
Greece, which has seen a huge influx of migrants and refugees coming in
over water via Turkey, without mentioning the country by name. The European
Commission has warned Greece it could face more border controls with
other states of the free-travel Schengen zone in May, if it does not fix
"serious deficiencies" in its management of the area's external
frontier. Merkel will travel
to Ankara on Monday to meet with Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu to try
and find a joint solution, including legal quotas for refugees in order
to stop people trafficking.
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