German Chancellor Angela Merkel stressed Turkey’s “key role” in solving Europe’s refugee crisis ahead of a weekend visit to Ankara, as her government tightened asylum rules yesterday to stem an influx of new arrivals.
With a bitterly divided EU struggling to cope with hundreds of thousands of people fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East, Asia and Africa, securing cooperation of non-member Turkey is seen as increasingly central to managing the problem.
Ms Merkel, facing pressure from her own conservatives to take a harder line on refugees, described the challenge of dealing with the migrant crisis as a “historic task” and said the European Union should do more to help Ankara deal with the influx.
“Without a doubt Turkey plays a key role in this situation,” she told the Bundestag lower house of parliament before attending a European Union summit in Brussels yesterday. “Most war refugees who come to Europe travel via Turkey. We won’t be able to order and stem the refugee movement without working together with Turkey,” she added. This included giving Turkey more support in caring for the refugees and providing humanitarian aid, as well as helping to secure borders and combat criminal smuggling rings, she said.
The number coming to us this year is too high
A favoured destination for migrants, Germany expects a record-breaking 800,000 to a million new arrivals this year.
In Berlin, politicians approved measures to tackle the crisis, including speeding up asylum and deportation procedures and reducing incentives for economic migrants to come to Germany.
“The number of those coming to us this year is simply too high," said Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere, though he refused to commit to a cap and echoed Ms Merkel in calling for an inter - national solution to the crisis.
Ms Merkel is under particular pressure from the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU), sister party of her Christian Democrats (CDU) – to take a harder line on refugees, though she has rejected calls to turn away asylum seekers.
She plans to visit Turkey on Sunday for talks with President Tayyip Erdogan and Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu. She said she was sensitive to concerns in Germany about the need to assert European values in talks with Turkey while also addressing the refugee crisis.