German Chancellor
Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande stressed on Sunday
the migrant crisis, which brought more than a million people to the
European Union last year, needs an EU-level solution. The
two leaders were meeting in Strasbourg on the Franco-German border to
discuss the agenda of the next European summit on Feb. 18-19. They had a
private meeting before joining EU Parliament Chairman Martin Schulz for
dinner. Merkel, who
opened her country's borders to Syrians fleeing civil war last summer,
is under increasing pressure to limit the influx. A
poll published this week indicated 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. The
crisis has strained relations between EU member states and tested their
commitment to Europe's open-borders Schengen agreement. Hollande and Merkel
agreed the action plan defined by the European Commission was a
priority, a source close to the French president said. The
plan involves assistance to Greece to control its borders, reinforcing
its means to register refugees but also a fight against smugglers and
the acceleration of procedures to expel illegal migrants. It also includes a package for Turkey to help it curb the influx of migrants into Europe. Germany's
anti-Islam PEGIDA movement staged rallies in several cities across
Europe on Saturday, including one gathering up to 8,000 people in the
eastern city of Dresden, to protest against the massive arrivals. Separately, the two leaders also expressed a "strong common concern" about the situation in Syria, the French source said. Russian
and Syrian government forces on Saturday intensified an assault on
rebel-held areas around the Syrian city of Aleppo that has prompted tens
of thousands to flee to the Turkish border to seek refuge.
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