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Austrian Border Backup and Confusion Challenge Europe Amid Migrant Crisis Migrant Crisis Clogs Europe’s Border Crossings
(about 5 hours later)
VIENNA — Europe struggled on Monday with traffic backups on Hungary’s border with Austria, stalled trains packed with refugees bound for Germany and deepening policy confusion over the migrant crisis punctuated by a warning from Germany’s leader that the European principle of open borders was at risk. VIENNA — The desperate migrants and asylum seekers now flooding into Europe by the tens of thousands, and the inability so far to accommodate them in an organized way, may be starting to fray Europe’s commitment to erase old borders.
The Austrian police, struggling to slow the influx of migrants from war-ravaged areas of the Middle East, Afghanistan and Africa, began checking vehicles crossing from Hungary overnight, finding 200 migrants and arresting at least five people suspected of being smugglers. The evidence was on stark display Monday, as the Austrian authorities disrupted traffic from Hungary, causing backups of at least 12 miles, while inspecting vehicles for smuggled migrants. The crackdown could last indefinitely.
Traffic stretched for miles on the Hungarian side of the border because of the traffic controls, but the Austrian authorities argued that they had no choice after the deaths of 71 migrants, including three children and a baby girl, whose decomposing bodies were found in a truck on a highway southeast of Vienna on Thursday. The official explanation was to avert another mass death of migrants like those found in an unventilated truck near Vienna last week, believed to be victims of a smuggling ring. But the practical consequences of the crackdown mean that routine passport-free travel between Hungary and Austria is no longer routine.
The clampdown also extended to at least four Austria-bound trains carrying hundreds of migrants, which were stopped at the Hungary-Austria border over what the authorities described as overcrowding, European news agencies reported. After several hours, three of the trains were allowed to proceed toward Vienna. In another disruption, trains from Hungary packed with migrants, many apparently seeking refuge in Germany, were stalled at the Hungary-Austria frontier for hours. By evening all were allowed to proceed amid some confusion about how far west the trains would go and whether all their passengers would be permitted to continue traveling.
The disruptions at the Hungary-Austria border have become the latest in a series of flash points in Europe’s crisis over how to accommodate the influx of desperate people. Clashes erupted less than two weeks ago between migrants and Macedonian officials who had sought to close their border, and British and French officials strengthened security around the 31-mile Channel Tunnel because of migrants’ attempts to smuggle themselves through it from France into Britain. German and Austrian officials also increased controls in their border region, with the official explanation that they were seeking to stop human traffickers.
While thousands have drowned at sea trying to cross the Mediterranean and enter Europe, the mass deaths on the road in Austria shocked the Continent and reverberated around the world. And Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, in some of her strongest language yet on what she described as the need for a shared response to the crisis, warned that without one, freedom of travel among the 28-members of the European Union could be imperiled.
“We want to save lives and fight the criminal smugglers,” said Johanna Mikl-Leitner, Austria’s interior minister. Asked how long the controls would be in place, she said the time period was “unlimited.” “If Europe fails on the question of refugees, if this close link with universal civil rights is broken, then it won’t be the Europe we wished for,” Ms. Merkel told reporters in Berlin.
The disaster in Austria highlighted Europe’s muddled response to a mass migration not seen since the end of World War II, with thousands arriving daily. Most of the new arrivals are crossing from Turkey to Greece, Macedonia and Serbia before entering Hungary and then heading to Europe’s wealthier northern countries mostly to Germany. Unfettered movements of people and goods in the European Union, the world’s largest economic bloc, is a precept of its cohesion, like the free flow within the United States.
The crisis has now become a priority for Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, who told reporters on Monday that Europeans must uphold principles of justice and human rights in their response. She exhorted the European Union’s 27 other members to share the burden more equitably. In a continent already struggling with a unified response to the Greek debt crisis and the movements of militant jihadists, the influx of migrants many of them from war-ravaged areas of the Middle East and Africa appears to have only further deepened frictions.
Otherwise, Ms. Merkel warned, the principle of unfettered movement among European Union member states, a freedom enshrined in what is known as the Schengen Agreement, would be endangered. Long-term questions over who takes care of them, how to screen them and who pays the expenses have all been left unresolved.
“If we don’t succeed in fairly distributing refugees then of course the Schengen question will be on the agenda for many,” Ms. Merkel said. These questions go to the heart of the viability of the European Union’s borderless interior, which member countries on the edges of Europe are required to police and protect. Some of those countries notably Greece, Italy and Hungary say they are so economically stressed that they are admitting migrants with little or no processing. Many are heading for the wealthier countries like Germany, which now expects 800,000 arrivals this year.
Ms. Merkel, Europe’s most powerful leader, has said she wants fellow European countries to take more of them.
She faced an immediate challenge on Monday from the leaders of Slovakia and the Czech Republic, who said that they would seek to form an alliance with Hungary to resist any quota-based redistribution of migrants.
The question is now likely to preoccupy European Union interior ministers who will meet in an emergency session on Sept. 14 to devise an answer to the refugee onslaught, the biggest to confront Europe since World War II.
The Austrian police, who began on Sunday night checking vehicles crossing from Hungary, reported finding 200 migrants and arresting at least five people suspected of being smugglers.
The Austrian authorities argued that they had no choice after the deaths of 71 migrants, whose decomposing bodies were found last Thursday in the truck, which had come from Hungary.
The Hungary-Austria border is the latest in a series of pressure points on migrant movement that have appeared all over Europe.
Clashes erupted less than two weeks ago between migrants and Macedonian officials who had sought to close their border with Greece. British and French officials strengthened security around the 31-mile Channel Tunnel because of migrants’ attempts to smuggle themselves through it into Britain.
While thousands have drowned at sea trying to cross the Mediterranean and enter Europe, the mass deaths on the road in Austria last week showed that migrants faced lethal dangers once inside Europe as well.
“We want to save lives and fight the criminal smugglers,” said Johanna Mikl-Leitner, Austria’s interior minister. The controls would remain in force, she said, for an “unlimited” time.
Most new migrant are crossing from Turkey to Greece, Macedonia and Serbia before entering Hungary and then heading to wealthier northern countries.
The crisis has now become a priority for Ms. Merkel, who told reporters that the principle of unfettered movement among European Union member states, a freedom enshrined in what is known as the Schengen Agreement, is at risk.
“If we don’t succeed in fairly distributing refugees, then, of course, the Schengen question will be on the agenda for many,” Ms. Merkel said.
Hungary, however, accused Germany of creating new complications in the migrant crisis — and encouraging the influx — with what the Hungarians described as a relaxation of restrictions on Germany-bound refugees from Syria.Hungary, however, accused Germany of creating new complications in the migrant crisis — and encouraging the influx — with what the Hungarians described as a relaxation of restrictions on Germany-bound refugees from Syria.
“The resulting confusion has often created unclear circumstances and situations which are difficult to manage,” said Zoltan Kovacs, a Hungarian government spokesman, arguing that Hungary was doing its part to uphold the integrity of Europe’s external borders.“The resulting confusion has often created unclear circumstances and situations which are difficult to manage,” said Zoltan Kovacs, a Hungarian government spokesman, arguing that Hungary was doing its part to uphold the integrity of Europe’s external borders.
“The Hungarian government requests that Germany clarifies the legal situation in order to eliminate this ambiguity and controversy,” he said.“The Hungarian government requests that Germany clarifies the legal situation in order to eliminate this ambiguity and controversy,” he said.
Last Tuesday, Germany’s office for migration and refugees issued new guidelines for handling asylum applications from Syrians, stating that officials would “effectively no longer enforce” the Dublin Regulation, which establishes the criteria for such cases. Consequently, those fleeing Syria now have a strong chance of remaining in Germany, regardless of how they reached the country. Last Tuesday, Germany’s office for migration and refugees issued new guidelines for handling asylum applications from Syrians, stating that officials would “effectively no longer enforce” the Dublin Regulation, which establishes the criteria for such cases. Consequently, those fleeing Syria now have a strong chance of remaining in Germany, regardless of how they reached the country. The change comes as German officials scramble to expand the infrastructure to speed up the handling of asylum applications, and amid criticism that they had ignored warnings and failed to prepare.
The change comes as German officials scramble to expand the infrastructure to speed up the handling of asylum applications, and amid criticism that they had ignored warnings and failed to prepare for the humanitarian crisis. The “truck of shame,” as the vehicle abandoned in Austria was labeled in a headline in the French daily Libération, was first spotted on the Hungarian side of the border around 9 a.m. on Wednesday, Austrian officials said at a news conference on Monday, when they released new details about the case.
The “truck of shame,” as the vehicle that was abandoned in Austria was labeled in a headline in the French daily Libération, was first spotted on the Hungarian side of the border around 9 a.m. on Wednesday, Austrian officials said at a news conference on Monday, when they released new details about the case.
A Hungarian truck driver told the police that he saw someone near the truck about half an hour later, said Konrad Kogler, director of public safety and security at the Austrian Interior Ministry. The vehicle was parked on the side of a highway linking Vienna to Budapest, Mr. Kogler said.A Hungarian truck driver told the police that he saw someone near the truck about half an hour later, said Konrad Kogler, director of public safety and security at the Austrian Interior Ministry. The vehicle was parked on the side of a highway linking Vienna to Budapest, Mr. Kogler said.
That was not unusual in the area, where 3,000 trucks a day cross from Hungary into Austria and head west, he said. “Now, of course, we see it with different eyes,” he added.That was not unusual in the area, where 3,000 trucks a day cross from Hungary into Austria and head west, he said. “Now, of course, we see it with different eyes,” he added.
A Hungarian website reported on Sunday that it had heard from a truck driver, whom it did not identify, who was driving back to Hungary from Germany on Wednesday morning and who reported briefly seeing someone near the truck. The Austrian police, who have sent reinforcements to Nickelsdorf, near the border with Hungary, detained five people suspected of being smugglers and discovered about 200 migrants, Mr. Kogler said.
The website, index.hu, quoted the driver as saying that he had recognized the person as one of the four who appeared before a Hungarian court on Saturday and who were ordered held until Sept. 29 on suspicion of involvement in the tragedy. A fifth person, one of four Bulgarian citizens held, was arrested late Saturday. By Monday morning, traffic across the border, which is normally open under the European Union arrangements allowing passport-free travel, was backed up for miles.
Autopsies being carried out in Vienna on the 71 bodies have yielded no identifications so far, Mr. Kogler said. He declined to speculate about other details, such as the time and cause of death, until the doctors had finished their examinations.
The Austrian police, who have sent reinforcements to Nickelsdorf, near the border with Hungary, detained five people suspected of being smugglers and discovered about 200 migrants, including 10 who were hidden in a truck with French license plates, Mr. Kogler said.
By Monday morning, traffic across the border, which is normally open under the European Union arrangements allowing passport-free travel, was backed up about 12 miles into Hungary, the traffic authorities said.
To reinforce the point about the need for such measures to save lives, the Austrian authorities emphasized at least two more cases this month in which disaster had been narrowly avoided.To reinforce the point about the need for such measures to save lives, the Austrian authorities emphasized at least two more cases this month in which disaster had been narrowly avoided.
One episode, which became public over the weekend, involved a truck with 26 migrants, including three badly dehydrated children, who were found after the police chased a suspicious truck in northern Austria. The children were treated at a hospital and then fled again with their parents, officials said. One episode, which became public over the weekend, involved a truck with 26 migrants, including three badly dehydrated children, found after the police chased a suspicious truck in northern Austria. The children were treated at a hospital and then fled again with their parents, officials said.
Mr. Kogler also cited a case of 86 people found in a truck west of Vienna in early August. They included 16 children and one pregnant woman, he said, and had been crammed into a truck for 12 hours. “It was only luck that none of these people died,” he said.Mr. Kogler also cited a case of 86 people found in a truck west of Vienna in early August. They included 16 children and one pregnant woman, he said, and had been crammed into a truck for 12 hours. “It was only luck that none of these people died,” he said.
He also cited estimates that more than 34,000 people had been smuggled into Austria so far this year, compared with an estimated 9,800 in all of 2014.He also cited estimates that more than 34,000 people had been smuggled into Austria so far this year, compared with an estimated 9,800 in all of 2014.
The Austrian police have apprehended 628 people suspected of being smugglers this year, compared with 277 in all of last year, he said.The Austrian police have apprehended 628 people suspected of being smugglers this year, compared with 277 in all of last year, he said.
Acknowledging that the new controls would clog movement along a busy artery for European traffic, Mr. Kogler invited reporters to weigh the cost of human lives against “a few extra minutes in traffic.” Acknowledging that the new controls would clog movement along a busy artery, Mr. Kogler invited reporters to weigh the cost of human lives against “a few extra minutes in traffic.”
“It is clear where the priority lies,” he said.