Danish and
Swedish migration ministers met in
Brussels on Wednesday (6 January) to border controls, which the two countries introduced earlier this week in response to the refugee crisis, creating unprecedented tensions between the two countries.
On Monday (4 January),
Sweden introduced ID controls at its border with
Denmark, prompting
Copenhagen to respond by setting up random border controls at its southern border with
Germany.
The new measures have caused unprecedented tensions between the otherwise good neighbours, who have had passport-free rules since the
1950s, as well as prompting hostile verbal attacks from politicians in both countries.
At emergency talks in Brussels, Sweden's
Migration Minister Morgan Johansson, and his Danish colleague
Inger Støjberg, finally sat down to discuss border issues during a meeting initiated by the
EU's Migration
Commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos, and the
German Interior Ministry's Parliamentary
State Secretary,
Ole Schröder.
Avramopolous told a press briefing after the meeting ―delayed
30 minutes― that the three countries at the table were real examples of "solidarity, hospitality and free movement" in
Europe.
"But the free movement and Schengen must be safeguarded,"
Avramopoulos said. "
Exceptional measures have been taken. We have agreed to go back to normal as soon as possible," Avramopoulos said.
For months, migration issues have been the hot topic in
Scandinavia, where hundreds of thousands of asylum seekers have arrived.
Per capita, the
Nordic region has by far accepted the highest number of asylum seekers in Europe, but public opinion has changed as the influx caused housing and trafficking problems, as well as mounting costs for local governments.
This triggered a blame game, with Denmark scolding Sweden for causing the problem in the first place by inviting
Syrian refugees to settle in the country.
Sweden responded by accusing Denmark of openly redirecting asylum seekers to its neighbour, thus ignoring the
Dublin rules of fingerprinting them or returning them to their first port of entry.
When Sweden made a
U-turn in November, and decided to introduce strict immigration rules and border controls, there were no high level communications between Sweden and Denmark.
Støjberg pointed out that that Denmark has not yet asked
German transport carriers to do ID checks. This is, however, something which Sweden has asked Danish carriers to be responsible for, costing railway
operator DSB 1 million
Danish crowns.
"But of course we will monitor the situation hour by hour. If necessary, we will introduce this with a very short notice. We don’t wish to be the final destination for asylum seekers," she stated.
"Can't do everything"
Johansson agreed with Avramopoulos that the new measures should not continue "longer than necessary", but that everyone should understand that Sweden, Germany and Denmark have accepted the most asylum seekers in
2015, as well as the year before.
"
We can't do everything," Johansson said.
Official data published this week showed that Sweden received around 163,000 asylum applications in 2015, while Denmark received around 18,000. The year before, 81,
300 sought asylum in Sweden and 14,000 in Denmark.
Germany's Schröder said that the controls at his country's border have not yet created big problems, and while there has been "transparent" information exchange between the three countries, they are not achieving
European solutions.
"Our problem in Europe is that we don’t have functioning border control at the Greek-Turkey border, and asylum rules are not applied. Therefore we are not achieving European solutions. When we don’t reach these solutions, we have solutions by individual member states."
Apart from the meeting in Brussels, Johansson and Støjberg will meet again later in January in Copenhagen to further discuss the current migration and Schengen issues.
- published: 06 Jan 2016
- views: 617