Saturday, December 9, 2017

EU Suing Countries That Refuse To Take Migrants




European Union Suing Countries that Refuse to take Migrants 


[Note: We are still awaiting the formation of the 10 Kings, which will somehow evolve from the EU. As stated before "big crisis" = "big change" - the current problems in the EU may well trigger the building blocks towards the final stage, the 10 Kings]


Pressure from Brussels is being ratcheted up against the so called Visegrad three (there were four!) to take thousands of those illegal migrants that have ‘made their way’ across the Mediterranean or came in via Turkey to Greece and are now piled up in Italy or Greece.
I’m calling them migrants because in most cases their status as legitimate refugees has not been determined.  Asylum seekers who can prove they would be persecuted if returned to their own countries become legitimate refugees only after having had their asylum claims processed and approved.
We learned this week that Germany was preparing to begin returning to Syria those migrants who failed their asylum requests.  




Here is news from News Europe:
The European Commission is suing Poland, the Czech Republic, and Hungary for failing to fulfill their obligations in the context of the European refugee relocation programme.
The Visegrad four had all objected, with Slovakia joining Hungary in suing the European Commission for interfering with their sovereignty. Slovakia stepped down from its confrontation with Brussels, but Prague, Warsaw, and Budapest continue to express objections to the programme. Turning the tables, the European Commission is now taking the three countries to the European Court of Justice (ECJ).

The refugee relocation plan was adopted in 2015 and envisaged the relocation of 160,000 refugees from Greece and Italy to the rest of the EU. The resettlement scheme took into account unemployment, GDP, and population. The quota for the Visegrad countries was 8,000 refugees.
The Law and Justice (PiS) government insists Poland will not accept migrants from Africa and the Middle East citing security concerns.
I wonder if these countries are thinking about getting out of the EU as the UK is now (slowly) doing.  Each could trade directly with the UK and the US.  But, they would need to build up their armies, shore up their borders as the Muslim population grows in Germany, France, Belgium, etc. in the coming decades.

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