European Border and Coast Guard Agency Frontex expects yet another rise in the number of migrants and asylum-seekers arriving in the EU. In 2022 Frontex recorded some 330,000 so-called irregular border crossings, the highest figure since 2016, when the bloc saw a record number of arrivals. For 2023, the agency predicts that irregular border crossings could rise even higher. This is because, among other things, arrivals via the central Mediterranean route to Italy tripled in spring.
Some EU member states and former members like Britain are therefore trying to adopt stricter laws, regulations, and asylum procedures to discourage or deter people from entering their countries.
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German cities and municipalities are saying that housing and integrating new arrivals presents an overwhelming task. Around a quarter of all asylum applications submitted in the EU are filed in Germany, even though it is not the country migrants first reach, due to its geographical location. Under EU law, Germany is not technically responsible for processing such applications. Germany’s federal and State governments have therefore agreed to adopt stricter deportation and detention rules for migrants who are obliged to leave the country. Federal Minister of the Interior Nancy Faeser has, however, so far rejected ramping up checks along the German-Polish border to deter irregular crossings. The German-Austrian border, meanwhile, has seen spot checks for several years, as it lies at the end of the Balkan migration route.
Outsourcing asylum processing
Other countries such as France, Austria, the Netherlands and Britain are trying to deter arrivals with tougher measures. Britain, for example, is threatening to outsource asylum processing to Rwanda or hold migrants on ships.
While Denmark failed in its attempt at opening an asylum centre in Rwanda, the government has nevertheless made asylum procedures more restrictive in recent years. Denmark has also maintained border checks with Germany for years. Only 180 people per month apply for asylum in the Nordic country. This is very little compared with a country like Austria, for example, which saw between 4,000 and 11,000 applications per month in 2022.
Migrants tend to first arrive in EU countries like Italy, Greece, Malta, Cyprus, Croatia and more recently Poland, owing to their geographical location. These states are trying to make it as difficult as possible for migrants to enter in the first place. Some external EU borders, such as the Greek-Turkish frontier along the Evros river, have been effectively shut. This only leaves the dangerous sea route for reaching the EU, or trying to enter the bloc by plane with a real or forged visa.
Sealing off the bloc in this way has been referred to as “protecting the EU’s external borders”, and is supported by EU interior ministers.
In addition, Italy is trying to make it ever more complicated for private rescue ships to bring shipwrecked people to its ports. This, too, is supposed to deter migrants. But the Mediterranean country is still struggling to keep migrants from arriving on its shores. That is why the government wants Tunisia to prevent migrants from boarding EU-bound vessels in the first place. Italy intends to pay Tunisia for holding back migrants, and negotiations over an agreement are underway. The number of people trying to reach Italy from Tunisia increased tenfold in 2023.
Various human rights organisations and media reports have stated that Greek, Croatian, and Polish border guards are resorting to pushbacks to deport newly arrived migrants. Migrants caught entering said countries are forcibly returned to the country from which they came, without due process. Yet the authorities in question deny carrying out pushbacks, or “refoulements”, as they are called, as they are prohibited under European and international law.
Hungarian pushbacks
Hungary, whose government says it does not accept any migration, makes no secret of conducting pushbacks. Migrants who have entered the country without documents can be deported without trial. Hungary does this on the basis of a 2015 “emergency law”, though European courts have ruled this practice illegal. The Hungarian government, however, ignores the rulings, regarding its pushback policy as successful. In 2022, just 44 people applied for asylum in Hungary. This is also due to the fact that applications must be submitted to Hungarian embassies.
According to the European Council on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE), some 1,50,000 people have been returned from Hungary to Serbia, across the border fence, without much ado. Hungary’s government says this deterrence works. It, therefore, does not see any point in becoming party to a new EU asylum law that would set out rules for distributing migrants within the bloc or making payments to those taking them in.
Poland wants to end immigration according to EU rules
In the lead-up to Poland’s parliamentary election in October in 2023, migration is a hotly debated issue. The ruling national conservative PiS party says it wants to prevent immigration to “protect” Poland—even though the country has seen only a small number of migrants apply for asylum. In the first half of 2023, a mere 2,785 applications were submitted, according to EU statistics agency Eurostat. This is a minuscule number in relation to Poland’s population of 38 million people.
Nevertheless, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki opposes EU attempts to reform the bloc’s common asylum law. Currently, Poland is erecting a fence along its eastern border with Belarus. And Morawiecki wants to hold a referendum that would block migration in line with EU guidelines. In Poland, immigrants are primarily seen as a political weapon, deliberately sent to the Polish-Belarusian border by Russia.
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EU immigration quotas?
Thorsten Frei, chairman of the Christian Democrat (CDU) and Christian Social Union (CSU) parliamentary group in the German Bundestag, earlier this summer suggested scrapping the EU’s guaranteed individual right to asylum in favour of an immigration quota. He decried the existing system as unfair, saying that mainly wealthy individuals and strong young men had what it takes to overcome the dangers of migrating to the EU. Frei said sick or elderly people, women, and children were far less likely to successfully cross the Sahara, or get aboad EU-bound vessels.
Refugee organisations point out that EU policy makes it very difficult to enter member states since asylum applications must be submitted on EU soil. That said, those who do make it into the EU can usually stay, even if their applications have been rejected. It is rare that migrants are deported back to their home country. More than 90 per cent of Syrian and Afghan refugees who reach the bloc can expect to be granted protection status. For many other countries of origin, such as Pakistan or Turkey, the situation is the exact opposite. Here, the rejection rate is above 75 per cent. In most cases, however, rejections do not lead to expulsions.