17 July 2018
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Austrian Presidency
document: "a new, better protection system under which no
applications for asylum are filed on EU territory"
17.7.18
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See: Austrian Presidency: Informal Meeting of COSI, Vienna, Austria, 2-3 July 2018: Strengthening EU External Border Protection and a Crisis-Resistant EU Asylum System(pdf)
The document was produced for an 'Informal Meeting of COSI' (the Council of the EU's Standing Committee on Operational Cooperation on Internal Security) which took place on 2 and 3 July in Vienna, and the proposals it contains were the subject of numerous subsequent press articles - with the Austrian President one of the many who criticised the government's ultra-hardline approach.
See: Austrian president criticises government's asylum proposals (The Local, link); Austrian proposal requires asylum seekers to apply outside EU: Profil (Reuters, link); Right of asylum: Austrias unsettling proposals to member states (EurActiv, link)
Some of the proposals were also discussed at an informal meeting of the EU's interior ministers on Friday 13 July, where the topic of "return centres" was also raised. The Luxembourg interior minister Jean Asselborn reportedly said that such an idea "shouldn't be discussed by civilized Europeans." See: No firm EU agreement on Austrian proposals for reducing migration (The Local, link)
The Austrian Presidency paper proposes:
"2.1. By 2020
By 2020 the following goals could be defined:
2.2. By 2025
By 2025 the following goals could be realised:
And includes the following statements, amongst others:
"...more and more Member States are open to exploring a new approach. Under the working title Future European Protection System (FEPS) and based on an Austrian initiative, a complete paradigm shift in EU asylum policy has been under consideration at senior officials level for some time now. The findings are considered in the Vienna Process in the context of which the topic of external border protection is also dealt with. A number of EU Member States, the EU Commission and external experts contribute towards further reflections and deliberations on these two important topics."
"...ultimately, there is no effective EU external border protection in place against illegal migration and the existing EU asylum system does not enable an early distinction between those who are in need of protection and those who are not."
"Disembarkment following rescue at sea as a rule only takes place in EU Member States. This means that apprehensions at sea not only remain ineffective (non-refoulement, examination of applications for asylum), but are exploited in people smugglers business models."
"Due to factors related to their background as well as their poor perspectives, they [smuggled migrants] repeatedly have considerable problems with living in free societies or even reject them. Among them are a large number of barely or poorly educated young men who have travelled to Europe alone. Many of these are particularly susceptible to ideologies that are hostile to freedom and/or are prone to turning to crime.
As a result of the prevailing weaknesses in the fields of external border protection and asylum, it is to be expected that the negative consequences of past and current policies will continue to be felt for many years to come. As experience with immigration from regions that are characterised by patriarchal, anti-freedom and/or backward-looking religious attitudes has shown, problems related to integration, safety and security may even increase significantly over several generations."
See: Austrian Presidency: Informal Meeting of COSI, Vienna, Austria, 2-3 July 2018: Strengthening EU External Border Protection and a Crisis-Resistant EU Asylum System(pdf)
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