Austria threatens to sue Hungary over
migrants
Send a link to a friend
[September 07, 2016]
VIENNA (Reuters) - Austria's
interior minister threatened on Wednesday to sue Hungary if it refused
to take back migrants who had crossed their shared border, as political
tensions mounted over immigration before presidential elections.
Austria's government, facing a challenge from the far-right Freedom
Party, has repeatedly accused Hungary of letting migrants enter its
territory in the face of EU rules that asylum seekers must stay in the
first country they enter in the bloc.
Hungary, itself preparing for a referendum on whether to accept a
Europe-wide asylum quota, has insisted that most refugees enter its
territory from other EU states, notably Italy and Greece, in a growing
blame game.
"States or groups of states that permanently break the law have to
expect legal consequences," Interior Minister Wolfgang Sobotka told ORF
radio, responding to a question on Hungary's refusal to give ground.
"In that case, the (Austrian) republic must sue. The republic must see
that the European Union acts according to the law, full stop," he added,
without specifying what legal process he was considering.
Budapest built a fence along its border with non-EU member Serbia to
stem the flow of hundreds of thousands of people, many of them fleeing
violence in the Middle East and North Africa. Both Hungary and Austria
had said this month the situation was now broadly under control.
A Hungarian government spokesman dismissed Sobotka's call in an emailed
statement, saying the vast majority of migrants had arrived in other EU
states first.
"Hungary cannot and will not take responsibility for, and suffer the
consequences of, the irresponsible conduct of other member states -
Austria, Germany - which expressly suggested ignoring the rules, or for
other states - Greece - that neglected to do their job," the spokesman
said.
[to top of second column] |
Migrants board a bus at an open migrant camp in Vamosszabadi,
Hungary on August 30, 2016. Picture taken on August 30, 2016.
REUTERS/Laszlo Balogh
Germany and Austria initially welcomed large numbers of refugees
from the Middle East and Afghanistan. However, Vienna started to
toughen its asylum rules earlier this year and introduced an annual
limit on the number of asylum requests it accepts.
Those steps, widely criticized by human rights groups and the
European Union, came after support for the far-right Freedom Party
(FPO) in opinion polls surged ahead of the ruling centrist parties.
FPO candidate Norbert Gerwald is standing to become Europe's first
far-right head of state in presidential elections on Oct. 2, the
same day as the Hungarian referendum.
(Reporting By Shadia Nasralla; additional reporting by Marton Dunai
in BUDAPEST; Editing by Paul Tait and Andrew Heavens)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|