Migrant crisis: Germany says enough is enough

Europe's Schengen system of open borders is under threat following Germany's decision to impose border controls. Emily Hohler reports.

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Germany's border controls is a worrying sign for the Schengen system
(Image credit: 2015 Anadolu Agency)

Germany's decision to reintroduce border controls on Sunday amidst feuding between European neighbours as to who should shelter hundreds of thousands of refugees has raised speculation that the Schengen system of open borders is under threat.

Austria followed Germany's lead on Monday, Slovakia reintroduced passport checks at its border with Hungary, and the Czech Republic is considering doing so too, says David Charter in The Times. Even Finland is stepping up controls on its border with Sweden.

While European Union (EU) members can suspend Schengen for a limited period (it has happened six times since 2013, notes Jack Sommers inThe Huffington Post), Germany's "abrupt decision" came as a "shock", saysIan Traynor in The Guardian. As the EU's biggest nation, straddling its geographical centre and bordering nine countries, Germany is a "lynchpin" of Schengen. Without Germany, it could collapse.

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Most EU leaders agree the problem lies more with the bloc's external borders and the Dublin rule, which requires asylum seekers to be processed in the first country they reach, says Alastair Macdonald on Reuters.

At heart, agrees Jim Brunsden in the Financial Times, this crisis is about a "lack of political will to share responsibility". Countries on the EU's southern border, notably Greece, Italy and Malta, have long complained of a "lack of solidarity" from other members on this issue.

As for Germany's move to suspend the Dublin rule and open its arms to Syrian refugees in recent weeks Germany stopped sending people back to Greece years ago because border management there is "in tatters".

Reintroducing border controls to ensure safe, orderly management of refugees is "logical", says David McAllister in The Daily Telegraph. "Germany is neither able nor willing to solve the refugee crisis" alone.

The EU must agree on a joint migration and asylum policy and members must support countries on the frontline, where refugees first set foot, with staff and technical assistance. There should also be "one binding and permanent mechanism that ensures the fair sharing of responsibility to host" these people.

European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker has set out a plan for refugee quotas, but it has been met with "implacable opposition" from EU states, including Hungary, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Poland and Romania, says Luke Harding in The Guardian.

Austria's chancellor, Werner Faymann, has said that Austria and Germany, both net contributors to the EU budget, would consider sanctions against countries refusing to share the burden, perhaps by axing some EU structural funds, which particularly help east European states.

A coherent response is needed but Europe's response so far has been "anything but", says Fortune's Geoffrey Smith. So far its peoples and governments have reacted in "wildly differing ways".

This is a battle for Europe's soul: "how to meet the demands of Christian charity and basic human decency while devising a practical policy for managing the ever-growing numbers straining its famed social safety nets". It would be foolish to expect it to end soon.

Emily Hohler
Politics editor

Emily has worked as a journalist for more than thirty years and was formerly Assistant Editor of MoneyWeek, which she helped launch in 2000. Prior to this, she was Deputy Features Editor of The Times and a Commissioning Editor for The Independent on Sunday and The Daily Telegraph. She has written for most of the national newspapers including The Times, the Daily and Sunday Telegraph, The Evening Standard and The Daily Mail, She interviewed celebrities weekly for The Sunday Telegraph and wrote a regular column for The Evening Standard. As Political Editor of MoneyWeek, Emily has covered subjects from Brexit to the Gaza war.

Aside from her writing, Emily trained as Nutritional Therapist following her son's diagnosis with Type 1 diabetes in 2011 and now works as a practitioner for Nature Doc, offering one-to-one consultations and running workshops in Oxfordshire.