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Hungary Detains Migrants in Border Crackdown | Hungary Detains Migrants in Border Crackdown |
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HORGOS, Serbia — Hungary declared a state of crisis along its border with Serbia early Tuesday, detaining 60 migrants and threatening to prosecute and imprison others trying to enter the country illegally from Serbia. | |
As of midnight, migrants who tried to breach the 109-mile fence made out of razor wire being constructed along Hungary’s border with Serbia faced the threat of arrest and criminal charges. | |
Gyorgy Bakondi, an aide to Prime Minister Viktor Orban, said at a news conference that Hungary had detained 60 migrants: 45 along the border with Serbia, and 15 others inside Hungary. As television showed images of holes in the fence, officials threatened to imprison anyone damaging the barrier. | |
Zoltan Kovacs, a spokesman for Mr. Orban, said Hungary was setting up a “transit zone” along the border with Serbia. Inside that zone, he said, only those crossing from Serbia who have already applied for asylum would be allowed to enter. Everyone else would be turned away and not legally considered as having entered Hungary. The zone appeared to be a means to circumvent rules limiting how many people Hungary could deport each day to Serbia. | |
Hungary’s move prompted an alarmed response from Serbia. Its foreign minister, Ivica Dacic, called Hungary’s turning back of migrants to Serbia “unacceptable,” Reuters reported. | |
Speaking from the border village of Horgos, Serbia’s labor minister, Aleksandar Vulin, told the Serbian broadcaster B92 that the situation could “spiral out of control.” He called for Hungary to open the border and for refugees to be allowed to seek asylum in Hungary. He said that migrants were arriving from all directions and that 1,000 were stranded “in no man’s land.” | |
Mr. Vulin said Serbia would provide food, water and transportation to temporary shelter, but added that the crisis could not be solved without Hungary’s cooperation. | |
Meanwhile, migrants amassed at the border threatened a hunger strike. Some shouted, “Open, open, open.” | |
The Hungarian police said Monday evening that border officers would be posted every 35 meters, or about 115 feet, along the entire border, and that they would arrest anyone trying to cross illegally. Scores of judges have been deployed to expedite legal proceedings against migrants charged with breaking the law. | The Hungarian police said Monday evening that border officers would be posted every 35 meters, or about 115 feet, along the entire border, and that they would arrest anyone trying to cross illegally. Scores of judges have been deployed to expedite legal proceedings against migrants charged with breaking the law. |
In what appeared to be a move to shepherd migrants out of the country, the Hungarian authorities continued overnight to charter trains, carrying about 1,000 migrants at a time, from the border with Serbia to the border with Austria. Migrants were then allowed to cross into Austria, local news media reported. | |
The Hungarian restrictions began to have an effect on other countries. | |
Austrian authorities said they were preparing for the likelihood that migrants would seek to bypass Hungary and enter Austria via Croatia and then Slovenia. The Austrian Army was set to deploy 2,200 soldiers to patrol the borders, primarily in the eastern state of Burgenland, which borders Hungary and shares short borders with Slovenia and Slovakia. | Austrian authorities said they were preparing for the likelihood that migrants would seek to bypass Hungary and enter Austria via Croatia and then Slovenia. The Austrian Army was set to deploy 2,200 soldiers to patrol the borders, primarily in the eastern state of Burgenland, which borders Hungary and shares short borders with Slovenia and Slovakia. |
In Hungary, Mr. Kovacs said the new steps to stop illegal border crossings were a response to a problem of “industrial scale.” | |
The moves by Hungary, which has found itself to be an unwilling center of Europe’s migration crisis, are the latest blow to two decades of borderless travel in parts of the European Union, which now has 28 members. On Monday, Austria, Slovakia and the Netherlands followed Germany’s example over the weekend and introduced checks at their borders, effectively suspending Europe’s border-free Schengen area. | |
On Monday in Brussels, the European Union failed to agree on a modest plan that would have required countries to distribute 120,000 more migrants across the bloc. | On Monday in Brussels, the European Union failed to agree on a modest plan that would have required countries to distribute 120,000 more migrants across the bloc. |
The meeting of the bloc’s internal affairs ministers ended without even a semblance of consensus, as countries from Eastern and Central Europe, including Hungary, opposed rules dictating migration policy, which they argue undermine their national sovereignty. | The meeting of the bloc’s internal affairs ministers ended without even a semblance of consensus, as countries from Eastern and Central Europe, including Hungary, opposed rules dictating migration policy, which they argue undermine their national sovereignty. |
The issue has created an East-West divide, with former Communist countries reluctant to accept a model that many there see as imposing multiculturalism on a region that sees itself as ill equipped to accept and integrate large numbers of migrants. | |
Mr. Kovacs, the Hungarian spokesman, said that the European Union needed to work to stop migrants from illegally entering the bloc in Greece, which has often been the entry point for people fleeing countries like Afghanistan, Eritrea and Syria. Hungary is eager for illegal migrants to be fended off before they can begin a trail via the western Balkans that eventually passes through Hungary and on to Austria, Germany or other destinations. | |
The Hungarian position is that, because the migrants have come through nations that the European Commission has asked to be designated as “safe countries,” such as Greece, Macedonia, Serbia and Turkey, they are not actually refugees fleeing imminent danger, but rather economic migrants who have no legal right to enter the country. | The Hungarian position is that, because the migrants have come through nations that the European Commission has asked to be designated as “safe countries,” such as Greece, Macedonia, Serbia and Turkey, they are not actually refugees fleeing imminent danger, but rather economic migrants who have no legal right to enter the country. |
Irena Vojackova-Sollorano, the United Nations representative in Serbia, told the Serbian news agency Tanjug that the situation along the border was changing hour to hour. She reiterated the international body’s position that people who crossed into Hungary should be granted all the relevant protections and not simply turned back to Serbia. | |
“More than 70 percent of the population escaping Syria are refugees,” she said, “running away from a situation that is, for them, a matter of life and death — and it is up to us to do all that we can to help them.” | “More than 70 percent of the population escaping Syria are refugees,” she said, “running away from a situation that is, for them, a matter of life and death — and it is up to us to do all that we can to help them.” |
Slovenia and Croatia said they were preparing for the possibility of a surge of migrants streaming through their territories to circumvent Hungary en route to Austria. | Slovenia and Croatia said they were preparing for the possibility of a surge of migrants streaming through their territories to circumvent Hungary en route to Austria. |
In Slovenia, which is a member of both the European Union and the passport-free Schengen area, the authorities said they had noted a slight uptick in cases involving migrants and human trafficking, which they said could increase with the Hungarian restrictions. | |
“In the case of a sudden arrival of large numbers of refugees, Slovenia could give shelter to several thousands and our capacities are being increased daily,” Bostjan Sefic, a state secretary at the Interior Ministry, told Agence France-Presse. He asked local communities to be patient and to provide help to those in need should the numbers exceed the government’s ability to handle them. | |
In Croatia, Zlatko Sokolar, a senior border police official, told the local news media that 6,000 police officers would be deployed to control the borders, but that as of Monday afternoon, there were few migrants arriving. | |
The United Nations refugee agency on Tuesday lamented the European Union’s failure to reach consensus on a plan to distribute migrants across the bloc. | The United Nations refugee agency on Tuesday lamented the European Union’s failure to reach consensus on a plan to distribute migrants across the bloc. |
“Decisive agreement is needed without further delay to address the needs, as is bold action based on solidarity from all member states,” the agency said in a statement. | “Decisive agreement is needed without further delay to address the needs, as is bold action based on solidarity from all member states,” the agency said in a statement. |