A European Union
draft deal with Turkey to stop migrants reaching Greece introduces a
harder edge of coercion to what critics have derided as a hitherto
feeble EU response to a crisis tearing it apart. Just
last week, some saw European Council President Donald Tusk running
short on ideas when he urged would-be migrants: "Do not come to Europe."
UKIP, a party campaigning to take Britain out of the EU at a June
referendum, said his "weak plea" was "too little too late to stop the
vast migrant flow into Europe". Yet
what Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu called a "game-changing"
plan for Turkey to forcibly take back not only economic migrants who
make it to Greek islands off its coast but even refugees from Syria, who
will then suffer disadvantages, is the strongest move yet to change the
calculus of migration. If the plan
is agreed, and if it works, taking to a boat from a Turkish beach at
the cost of life savings to a smuggler - and possibly of life itself -
would no longer be a ticket to a better life in Germany but a rapid
round trip to Turkey. There, those returned would be, in the words of EU
officials, "at the back of the line" for legal asylum and resettlement
in Europe. The United Nations
refugee agency warned that Europe must not close its door to those in
need, as civil war in Syria has left millions homeless and afraid. Human
rights groups have been scathing about a Europe preaching democracy but
cutting a deal with a Turkish government accused of persecuting
opponents. Many are concerned about a quickfire process of deporting everyone back to Turkey with little regard for individuals. But
1.2 million people reached the EU last year to claim asylum amid
chaotic scenes on beaches and on the long trek north from Greece through
the Balkans. It has set EU states at odds, shut long-uncontrolled
borders and fueled nationalist sentiment among voters across the bloc.
Leaders' patience is thin. "We need to break the link between getting in a boat and getting settlement in Europe," they said after Monday's summit. DETERRENCE An earlier EU plan
foresaw deportation back to Turkey reserved for those, such as
Pakistanis or North Africans, with little likelihood of winning refugee
status in the EU - though in practice making such distinctions has
proven problematic. The new plan
would see even Syrians and others with stronger asylum claims being
shipped with little ceremony back across straits, now being
demonstratively patrolled by NATO warships. To
force back crowds that last year numbered up to 20,000 a day seems
impracticable. But EU officials said the key was to dissuade people from
traveling in the first place. For
every Syrian sent back from a Greek island in future, another Syrian
would be entitled to a legal, safe trip to Europe. That could be a
rather small number if deterrence works, so EU leaders agreed to
consider also resettling larger numbers. For Europeans, the deal could help end a crisis that has jeopardized their cherished Schengen passport-free zone. There
are clear gains for Greece, where Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has
warned of becoming a "warehouse of souls" as more than 30,000 migrants
have become stranded there since its northern neighbors began closing
their borders. The downside could be ugly scenes on the islands off
Turkey. For German
Chancellor Angela Merkel, who worked closely on the deal with Davutoglu
before the summit, a dramatic sign of an imminent end to the crisis
could be a boost in regional elections on Sunday that will, in part,
pass judgment on her decision last summer to open Germany's doors to
Syrians. "DIRTY DEAL" Turkey
is seeking in return some 6 billion euros ($6.6 billion) to help
improve the lives of refugees over the next three years - twice as much
as a two-year deal with the EU struck in November, as well as the
opening of new "chapters" in its long-stalled negotiation to join the
European Union. Also important for
Turkish public opinion is a request to bring forward by four months to
June a plan to make it easier for Turks to travel without visas to
Europe's Schengen zone. Several European
governments have strong reservations about the Turkish proposals. Cyprus
is wary about lifting its veto on parts of the accession process as
long as Ankara does not end a refusal to recognize or trade with Cyprus,
diplomats said. It is also concerned not to disrupt talks that have brought the prospect of ending the four-decade division of the island. France,
sceptical of Turkey ever joining the EU, is resistant to a rapid easing
of visa requirements for Turkey. President Francois Hollande said it
would still have to meet 72 criteria - among them modernizing Turkish
identity documents. Britain, too,
where Prime Minister David Cameron is campaigning to persuade voters to
back continued EU membership on June 23, is wary of newspaper headlines
suggesting 75 million Turks may soon be traveling more easily around
Europe, even if Britain is outside the Schengen visa area they could
access. And central and eastern
European states, long opposed to EU efforts to force them to take in a
share of refugees, are concerned about elements of the deal that could
see more calls for asylum-seekers to be resettled around the bloc. However, the lure of an end to the crisis - at least inside Europe - may prove a compelling argument despite the critics. John
O'Brennan, Jean Monnet Professor of European Integration at Maynooth
University in Ireland, tweeted: "EU norms of pluralism are being
completely eviscerated. By the European Union itself. Shame on this
dirty deal with Turkey." Summit
chair Tusk, a former Polish premier, insisted the EU was not going soft
on defending human rights in Turkey. But he stressed the benefits of the
plan to crack down on travelers, saying: "The days of irregular
migration to Europe are over."
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