Europe looks to bridge stark divides over migrant influx
French President says no EU country should be exempt from taking in people with the right to asylum
NICKELSDORF, AUSTRIA:
Eastern European ministers were to meet Monday to attempt to bridge stark differences over their refugee policies, as an escalating crisis saw thousands of migrants shunted from one border to another over the weekend.
Several thousand finally entered Austria aboard crowded buses and trains on Sunday, while at least 13 refugees drowned off the coast of Turkey, the latest to perish as they try to escape conflict in their home countries mostly in the Middle East and Africa.
Monday's talks between the foreign ministers of the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, Romania and Latvia with their counterpart from Luxembourg, which currently holds the EU presidency, are aimed at addressing divides between neighbouring states.
Read: Canada to accept 10,000 Syrians within one year
EU interior ministers will also meet on Tuesday, in the hope that significant progress will be made by the time a bloc-wide emergency summit opens on Wednesday.
Six children were among those who died off the coast of Turkey after the inflatable dinghy carrying them to Greece collided with a ship, Turkish media reported. Greek reports indicated another two children may still be missing.
The dinghy was carrying at least 46 migrants to Lesbos, one of several Greek islands inundated in recent months by tens of thousands of people arriving from Syria, Afghanistan and elsewhere in the Middle East and South Asia.
A survivor whose name was given as Haseen told Greek state news agency ANA: "It was dark, we saw the ship bearing down on us. We tried to signal with flashlights and mobile phones but they did not see us."
Thrown overboard, the passengers fought to keep their heads above water. "We lost the children. We could not see them in the dark," Haseen said.
More than 2,800 people have died among the nearly half a million who have braved dangerous trips across the Mediterranean to reach Europe so far this year, according to the International Organization for Migration.
At the Austrian town of Nickelsdorf on the Hungarian border, some 7,000 refugees and migrants arrived on Sunday, a pile-up that caused long waits for onward transport. A snaking line of arrivals awaited buses, with others hoping for taxis to take them to Vienna.
"It's known that once you get to Austria, you've arrived," said Saeed, a 23-year-old from Damascus who is hoping his odyssey will end in Germany.
"As we approach the Europe that we want, people are getting nicer and nicer."
Budapest on Sunday suddenly reopened the Horgos-Roszke 1 crossing, the closure of which had added distance and uncertainty for those undertaking the gruelling journey across the Balkans into western Europe, with Croatia saying more than 25,000 had entered its territory since Wednesday.
Read: Migrants missing in new boat sinking off Greece
Within days of the border closure, Croatia said it could not cope with the huge influx and began redirecting migrants back towards Hungary or towards Slovenia, sparking angry reactions from both countries.
Both Zagreb and Budapest have stepped up efforts this week to move the huge crowds through and out of their territory as quickly as possible, with Croatia pushing a record 1,200 migrants onto neighbouring Hungary in the space of an hour on Sunday.
The right-wing government in Budapest has already built a razor-wire barrier along much of its border with Croatia, after sealing off its frontier with Serbia in a bid to keep migrants out.
The continent's worst migration crisis since World War II has caused a deep rift between EU members over how to distribute the arrivals.
The massive influx has raised questions over the fate of the Schengen agreement allowing borderless travel across most countries within the 28-nation bloc, with several of them imposing border controls.
There are also bitter divisions over how to distribute the influx fairly between EU members, with several Eastern European countries staunchly opposed to plans for mandatory quotas of refugees.
French President Francois Hollande said Sunday that no EU country should be exempt from taking in people with the right to asylum.
"No one can be exempt or we would no longer belong to the same union built on values and principles," he said.
Refugees have largely skirted France, though, with Sabreen al Rassace of the aid group Revivre citing a "very, very difficult" process for getting a house and the "long and very traumatising administrative process".
The United States meanwhile said it would take in 85,000 refugees over the next year, including 10,000 Syrians -- up from 70,000 in the fiscal year ending this month.
Eastern European ministers were to meet Monday to attempt to bridge stark differences over their refugee policies, as an escalating crisis saw thousands of migrants shunted from one border to another over the weekend.
Several thousand finally entered Austria aboard crowded buses and trains on Sunday, while at least 13 refugees drowned off the coast of Turkey, the latest to perish as they try to escape conflict in their home countries mostly in the Middle East and Africa.
Monday's talks between the foreign ministers of the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, Romania and Latvia with their counterpart from Luxembourg, which currently holds the EU presidency, are aimed at addressing divides between neighbouring states.
Read: Canada to accept 10,000 Syrians within one year
EU interior ministers will also meet on Tuesday, in the hope that significant progress will be made by the time a bloc-wide emergency summit opens on Wednesday.
Six children were among those who died off the coast of Turkey after the inflatable dinghy carrying them to Greece collided with a ship, Turkish media reported. Greek reports indicated another two children may still be missing.
The dinghy was carrying at least 46 migrants to Lesbos, one of several Greek islands inundated in recent months by tens of thousands of people arriving from Syria, Afghanistan and elsewhere in the Middle East and South Asia.
A survivor whose name was given as Haseen told Greek state news agency ANA: "It was dark, we saw the ship bearing down on us. We tried to signal with flashlights and mobile phones but they did not see us."
Thrown overboard, the passengers fought to keep their heads above water. "We lost the children. We could not see them in the dark," Haseen said.
More than 2,800 people have died among the nearly half a million who have braved dangerous trips across the Mediterranean to reach Europe so far this year, according to the International Organization for Migration.
At the Austrian town of Nickelsdorf on the Hungarian border, some 7,000 refugees and migrants arrived on Sunday, a pile-up that caused long waits for onward transport. A snaking line of arrivals awaited buses, with others hoping for taxis to take them to Vienna.
"It's known that once you get to Austria, you've arrived," said Saeed, a 23-year-old from Damascus who is hoping his odyssey will end in Germany.
"As we approach the Europe that we want, people are getting nicer and nicer."
Budapest on Sunday suddenly reopened the Horgos-Roszke 1 crossing, the closure of which had added distance and uncertainty for those undertaking the gruelling journey across the Balkans into western Europe, with Croatia saying more than 25,000 had entered its territory since Wednesday.
Read: Migrants missing in new boat sinking off Greece
Within days of the border closure, Croatia said it could not cope with the huge influx and began redirecting migrants back towards Hungary or towards Slovenia, sparking angry reactions from both countries.
Both Zagreb and Budapest have stepped up efforts this week to move the huge crowds through and out of their territory as quickly as possible, with Croatia pushing a record 1,200 migrants onto neighbouring Hungary in the space of an hour on Sunday.
The right-wing government in Budapest has already built a razor-wire barrier along much of its border with Croatia, after sealing off its frontier with Serbia in a bid to keep migrants out.
The continent's worst migration crisis since World War II has caused a deep rift between EU members over how to distribute the arrivals.
The massive influx has raised questions over the fate of the Schengen agreement allowing borderless travel across most countries within the 28-nation bloc, with several of them imposing border controls.
There are also bitter divisions over how to distribute the influx fairly between EU members, with several Eastern European countries staunchly opposed to plans for mandatory quotas of refugees.
French President Francois Hollande said Sunday that no EU country should be exempt from taking in people with the right to asylum.
"No one can be exempt or we would no longer belong to the same union built on values and principles," he said.
Refugees have largely skirted France, though, with Sabreen al Rassace of the aid group Revivre citing a "very, very difficult" process for getting a house and the "long and very traumatising administrative process".
The United States meanwhile said it would take in 85,000 refugees over the next year, including 10,000 Syrians -- up from 70,000 in the fiscal year ending this month.