BRUSSELS: The European Commission will on
Wednesday (May 4) give conditional backing to visa-free travel for more
than 80 million Turks as the EU tries to save a controversial deal with
Ankara to solve the migrant crisis.
Brussels is also set to announce further
measures to tackle the biggest influx of migrants since World War II,
with an extension of border controls in the passport-free Schengen zone
and an overhaul of its asylum rules.
Turkey has threatened to tear up the March
agreement to take back migrants who cross the Aegean Sea to Greece if
the EU fails to keep its promise to allow Turkish citizens to travel
without visas to the Schengen area by next month.
Many EU states still have concerns about the
legality of the deal and the human rights situation in Turkey, and the
plan for 90-day visas must be cleared by all 28 nations in the bloc and
the European Parliament.
The Commission is expected to find that Turkey
has achieved only 64 of the 72 benchmarks needed for visa-free travel,
which range from biometric passports to respect for human rights,
European sources told AFP.
This means that it will back the visa
arrangement if Ankara completes the so-called visa liberalisation
roadmap by the end of June, the sources said.
SCHENGEN BORDER RULES
The Turkish deal is the cornerstone of the
EU's plan to curb a crisis that has seen 1.25 million Syrian, Iraqi,
Afghan and other migrants enter since 2015, though the numbers of
arrivals have dropped since March.
Turkey meanwhile has been rushing through laws
in recent days to meet the EU's requirements, although that effort has
occasionally stalled because of a series of mass brawls in parliament.
The new laws include making a reciprocal visa
agreement for EU nationals, including those of Cyprus, with which Turkey
has long-standing tensions over its occupation of the north of the
Mediterranean island.
"Yesterday, a government decree has been
adopted by the Turkish government allowing the access to Turkish
territory without visa for citizens of all 28 member states, I repeat
all 28," Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas said.
On Wednesday the EU will also allow countries
to extend border controls in the Schengen area as a result of the
migrant crisis and recent terror attacks.
Germany, France, Austria, Denmark and Sweden requested the extension, saying the border situation remains "extremely volatile".
Since 2015 several countries in the 26-nation
Schengen zone have reintroduced border controls due to the migrant
crisis -- effectively suspending its principle of border-free travel.
European sources said the Commission was to
approve the measure in line with its so-called "roadmap" for the
restoration of the normal functioning of Schengen "by the end of the
year".
EU rules say countries can reintroduce border
controls for up to two years, in periods of up to six months at a time,
in exceptional circumstances.
DUBLIN RULES
Also Wednesday, the EU is expected to unveil
an overhaul of its asylum rules to more fairly share responsibility for
migrants and refugees arriving in Europe.
The so-called Dublin rules currently in force
have been criticised as obsolete and unfair to countries like Greece,
where most of the migrants entered the bloc last year.
Under those rules, migrants seeking asylum
must lodge their application in the country where they first arrived,
and should be returned there if they try to move elsewhere in the bloc.
The Commission is expected to propose a
special mechanism whereby refugees and migrants can be relocated to
other countries if a crisis is declared -- for example in Greece.
The Financial Times reported that countries
that do not take their share could be fined 250,000 euros per person
that they refuse to accept. But the EU is expected to shun a complete
overhaul of the Dublin rules.
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