The Commission is planning to propose binding quotas for
Member States accepting refugees. This
would be a major break from the Dublin Regulation mind set, where asylum
seekers can only apply where they enter the EU – a system that has put
intolerable pressures on the Mediterranean countries to the benefit of northern
Europe. The Commission plan aims to have an equitable division of refugees,
taking into account a Member State’s population, economic situation, employment
levels and the number of refugees already accepted by that Member State.
The European Parliament has also called for binding quotas
to be put in place to share the influx of refugees more equitably, with a grand
coalition of the EPP and S&D backing the motion. The situation highlights
not only the moral imperative to act to help those trying to escape desperate
circumstances, but also the fundamental tension between the Dublin Regulation’s
“common border” approach and the lack of true common policies within the EU on
asylum seekers.
Getting agreement on any binding quotas will be an uphill
struggle. In the wake of the most recent Mediterranean tragedies, EU ministers
failed to agree on 5,000, so the Commission number of 20,000 appears ambitious. Though the UK,
Ireland and Denmark would not be bound by such quotas (they have an “opt-in” in
justice and home affairs matters, except for Denmark which has an opt-out), the
UK’s new Conservative government was quick to make clear that it won’t accept
mandatory quotas and would reject this and any other future Commission plan on
quotas. Within the Schengen zone, Hungary has also raised
objections. The Commission will have to be creative in balancing Member States’
concerns over sovereignty over borders and immigration while being bold enough
to push for a system that will commit Europe to living up to its global
responsibilities.
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