European countries on the route used by more than 1 million refugees to reach the continent last year on Saturday agreed to focus on the more easily achievable ways to prevent another influx than the big issues the EU is divided over, Austria said.
Vienna has convened a summit of nations along the Balkan route in the hope of pressuring EU member states into taking faster action over a refugee crisis that has caused deep divisions in the bloc and shaken up national politics.
“We are focusing on where we can achieve something and implementing that more forcefully,” Austrian Chancellor Christian Kern told a news conference after the meeting.
Austria and its Balkan neighbors infuriated Athens by jointly introducing border restrictions in February that largely shut down that route, leaving thousands of refugees stranded on Greek territory and undermining German calls for united EU action.
Tensions with Germany and Greece have since eased, partly because a deal between the EU and Turkey has slowed the flow of refugees into Greece. Both German Chancellor Angela Merkel and her Greek counterpart attended the talks.
Working toward fully implementing that deal, including the deadlocked issue of visa-free travel for Turks, was one of the three main goals agreed on at Saturday’s talks, Kern said.
Others included providing extra staff for EU border force Frontex, starting with ensuring member states meet commitments already made, which has not yet happened, he added.
Kern said the countries hoped that progress on some of these issues would help unblock disagreements at the heart of the immigration problem.
Participants said they also wanted to work faster toward deals modeled on the agreement with Turkey, with countries including Niger and Egypt, as well as deals with Pakistan and Afghanistan that would clear the way for deporting more refugees from Greece, where thousands live in crowded camps like one that caught fire last week.
There has been tension between Merkel, who let in 1 million people last year, and ex-communist eastern states that have refused to take in refugees.
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