The Malta Independent 7 May 2024, Tuesday
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European Union ministers can't agree on relocating 40,000 refugees

Associated Press Friday, 10 July 2015, 06:29 Last update: about 10 years ago

European Union ministers failed Thursday to agree on relocating 40,000 of the refugees making risky boat trips from North Africa to Italy and Greeceand will try again later this month to broker a deal on how many people each country will accept.

The stalemate came a day after the UN refugee agency announced that data fromGreece, Italy, Malta and Spain showed 137,000 people arriving in those countries between January and June, 83 percent more than the same time last year. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees said 1,867 people died making the crossing, up from 588 a year earlier.

"The debate we've had today has been difficult. It's a very sensitive issue," said Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn, whose country hosted Thursday's ministerial meeting. He said ministers will meet again July 20 to try to reach an agreement.

Asselborn said ministers did manage to agree how to distribute 20,000 refugees currently being housed outside Europe, but getting countries to commit to divide up the 40,000 making their way to Greece and Italy over the next two years was a step too far.

"We're not very far from the target but some countries need time to negotiate, time to adjust and that is why today we preferred to defer it to July 20," he said.

The inability to reach an agreement again exposes deep divisions within the EU over how to deal with the huge influx of migrants fleeing conflicts in Syria, Iraq and Africa.

When the EU decided in June to share among members the 40,000 refugees, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker called it "a very modest effort."

While EU officials debated what to do, migrants kept setting out from Libya in smugglers' boats in hopes of reaching Europe's Mediterranean shores.

The Italian coast guard said that on Thursday it saved 106 migrants and recovered 12 bodies from a motorized rubber dinghy that had partially sunk. That was one of eight rescues coordinated by the coast guard that day, bringing to safety a total of 823 migrants.

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