The Latest: Rights group criticizes Greek migrant camps
BERLIN (AP) — The Latest on
European efforts to respond to the wave of migration (all times local):
1:20 p.m. Human Rights Watch issued a statement criticizing what it said
were the "deplorable conditions" in which about 4,000 people were being
detained on the Greek islands of Lesbos and Chios.
Eva Cossé, HRW's Greece specialist, said: "The EU's
policy, carried out in Greece, has locked up families and others who
have fled horrors such as ISIS terror, Taliban threats, or
Syrian-government barrel bombs."The statement also said: "Turkey cannot be considered a safe country due to its refusal to grant effective protection to non-Europeans in need, including Afghans and Iraqis."
10:45 a.m.
Austria's defense minister says the
country is ready to completely close the main border crossing to Italy
in case an influx of migrants leads to an "extreme situation."
State-run broadcaster ORF on Thursday
quoted Hans Peter Doskozil as saying such a move at the Brenner crossing
would be taken if Italy refused to accept migrants turned back by
Austria and they could not proceed to Germany.
Doskozil says Austria has registered
between 16,000 and 17,000 applications for asylum since the start of the
year. The country has announced a cap of 37,500 applications for 2016
after receiving about 90,000 last year.
He expresses skepticism about the EU-Turkey agreement on migrant returns saying "we don't know how long the deal will last."
9:55 a.m.
Germany's governing parties say
they've agreed upon a broad range of measures to help the country
integrate those of the 1.1 million migrants who arrived last year who
are granted asylum.
The measures announced Thursday, which
will be discussed with state governors before they're formalized to
present to Parliament, seek to strike a balance between giving migrants
easier access to jobs and integration courses, while increasing
expectations of them as well.
They foresee creating thousands of
government-funded "job opportunities" for migrants, news agency dpa
reported, and the suspension for three years of a rule that
asylum-seekers are initially excluded from jobs unless no German or
European Union citizen can fill them.
Waiting times for integration courses teaching German will be reduced, but they'll be made mandatory for more migrants.
9:30 a.m.
Serbian police say they have arrested
six people suspected of smuggling migrants across the border to Hungary
and other EU countries.
The six face charges of illegally crossing the state border and people smuggling.
Police said Thursday that the suspects
charged the migrants from 900-1,200 euros ($1,000-$1,350) for the
illegal transfer. They say the migrants were from Kosovo, Asian and
African countries.
Migrants fleeing war and poverty have
turned to smugglers to help them reach wealthy European nations after
Balkan countries closed their borders for the passage.


