Brussels / AFP
A proposed EU-Turkey deal to swap Syrian refugees one-for-one will be only “temporary” and a longer-term resettlement arrangement will be necessary, the Netherlands warned on Thursday.
European Union interior ministers meeting in Brussels were debating a proposal made by Ankara at a leaders’ summit on Monday for a wide-ranging deal to curb the migration crisis.
Under the deal the EU would resettle one Syrian refugee directly from camps in Turkey, in exchange for every Syrian that Turkey takes from the overstretched Greek islands, a scheme both sides have hailed as “game-changing”.
But Dutch migration minister Klaas Dijkhoff, whose country holds the six-month rotating presidency of the 28-nation EU, said that it was “not a permanent mechanism.”
“I think the one-on-one readmission and resettlement, it’s temporary,” Dijkhoff told reporters as he arrived for the meeting.
“I think when you have the one-on-one scheme, we will see over time that it won’t pay off to cross the sea in an illegal and very dangerous fashion. So that flow will stop,” he said.
“And then we will have to talk with Turkey about a more permanent resettlement scheme in a sense of burden sharing.”
Austria’s interior minister Johanna Mikl-Leitner meanwhile hit out at the deal with Muslim-majority Turkey, a long-term EU membership candidate.
“I really have to ask myself the question if we will throw our values overboard eventually,” she told reporters.
Earlier she told Austrian ORF public radio she was “extremely critical” of the deal.
Under the one-for-one deal, the resettlement places would be taken from an existing EU plan to resettle 22,000 Syrians from camps in the Middle East and from 54,000 unallocated places from a slow-moving EU plan to redistribute refugees from Greece and Italy.