
Another EU state introduces immigration controls
The EU has been grappling with a refugee crisis since at least 2015, largely caused by upheavals in the Middle East and Africa, and later by the Ukraine conflict. Warsaw has previously accused German police of 'dumping' thousands of migrants back across the Polish border. Some activists have organized self-styled 'citizen border patrols' along the German frontier.
'We remain advocates for freedom of movement in Europe, but only on condition that there is the shared will of all neighbors… to minimize the uncontrolled flow of migrants across our borders,' Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said during a cabinet meeting on Tuesday. He stated that temporary border controls would similarly be implemented on Poland's border with Lithuania.
In 2023, neighboring Germany, the EU's top destination for asylum seekers, introduced temporary controls on its borders with Poland and the Czech Republic to stem the flow. Most of the people entering Poland travel on to western Europe, where benefits for asylum seekers are more generous. Berlin has since repeatedly renewed the controls.
Under the Schengen agreement, participant nations are allowed to temporarily reintroduce border controls in emergency situations, with the Covid-19 outbreak having been one recent instance.
Tighter national migration and border control policies could lead to the destruction of the EU, former German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned in May.
Commenting on the restoration of control on the Polish-Lithuanian border, Tusk accused the Baltic state, as well as neighboring Latvia, of having lax border controls. The lapses have supposedly allowed illegal migrants to cross over from non-EU Belarus, and subsequently to enter Poland.
Since 2021, Warsaw has accused Minsk and Moscow of deliberately orchestrating the flow of illegal migrants into EU states. Russia and Belarus have denied the allegations.
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Russia Today
12 hours ago
- Russia Today
Another EU state introduces immigration controls
Poland has decided to temporarily reintroduce border controls along its frontiers with Germany and Lithuania to stop the flow of illegal migrants. All three nations are part of the Schengen Area, which allows free travel across most of the bloc. The EU has been grappling with a refugee crisis since at least 2015, largely caused by upheavals in the Middle East and Africa, and later by the Ukraine conflict. Warsaw has previously accused German police of 'dumping' thousands of migrants back across the Polish border. Some activists have organized self-styled 'citizen border patrols' along the German frontier. 'We remain advocates for freedom of movement in Europe, but only on condition that there is the shared will of all neighbors… to minimize the uncontrolled flow of migrants across our borders,' Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said during a cabinet meeting on Tuesday. He stated that temporary border controls would similarly be implemented on Poland's border with Lithuania. In 2023, neighboring Germany, the EU's top destination for asylum seekers, introduced temporary controls on its borders with Poland and the Czech Republic to stem the flow. Most of the people entering Poland travel on to western Europe, where benefits for asylum seekers are more generous. Berlin has since repeatedly renewed the controls. Under the Schengen agreement, participant nations are allowed to temporarily reintroduce border controls in emergency situations, with the Covid-19 outbreak having been one recent instance. Tighter national migration and border control policies could lead to the destruction of the EU, former German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned in May. Commenting on the restoration of control on the Polish-Lithuanian border, Tusk accused the Baltic state, as well as neighboring Latvia, of having lax border controls. The lapses have supposedly allowed illegal migrants to cross over from non-EU Belarus, and subsequently to enter Poland. Since 2021, Warsaw has accused Minsk and Moscow of deliberately orchestrating the flow of illegal migrants into EU states. Russia and Belarus have denied the allegations.


Russia Today
17 hours ago
- Russia Today
‘Catastrophic' budget increase will destroy NATO
The results of NATO countries hiking military budgets will be 'catastrophic' and lead to the bloc's collapse, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Monday. His remarks mirrored Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski's earlier suggestion that a boost in Moscow's defense spending could trigger the fall of the government. At NATO's most recent summit last month in the Hague, member states committed to spending 5% of GDP on the military – a significant rise from the previous 2% target. Poland backed the hike, arguing that failing to achieve the new benchmark 'as soon as possible' would pose a ''threat'' to the bloc considering the ongoing Ukraine conflict. In an interview with Polish media, Sikorski drew a parallel between modern Russia and the late USSR. Referring to President Vladimir Putin, he stated that 'he himself once said that the Soviet Union fell because it spent too much on armament, and now he is doing exactly the same thing.' Meanwhile, speaking to the press at the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) Foreign Ministers Council in Kyrgyzstan, Sergey Lavrov took issue with Sikorski's characterization, countering: 'Perhaps he foresees – being such a prophet – that this catastrophic, in my view, increase in NATO countries' budgets will also lead to the organization's collapse.' Lavrov also said that Russia 'plans to reduce its military spending,' which now accounts for 6.3% of GDP, and 'be guided by common sense, but not made-up threats like NATO member states, including Sikorsky.' The 5% GDP target faced opposition from some NATO members. Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico said his country could not allocate one-fifth of its state budget to defense, while Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez called the goal 'not only unreasonable but also counterproductive.'


Russia Today
19 hours ago
- Russia Today
Russia sanctions world's largest truck maker
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