EU to help guard Greece-Macedonia border

Greece has accepted help from the rest of Europe in regulating its border with Macedonia, where thousands of migrants are trying to cross into the EU.

European guards will help Greeks manage their frontier with Macedonia, the EU border agency Frontex has said after a deal that addresses concerns in the bloc over Athens' commitment to control migration.

Other EU states had been piling pressure on Greece to accept help for registering and documenting migrants trying to head north across the Balkans towards Germany and other wealthy states, and had wanted to see a deal by the time interior ministers meet in Brussels on Friday to review efforts to stem migration flows.

Frontex on Thursday said it would help to register migrants at the Macedonian border and would deploy more personnel there next week. Greek officials confirmed Frontex's role and insisted that Athens had not previously refused help.

"Migrants at Greece's northern border will be checked and those found not properly identified will be registered," said Frontex Executive Director Fabrice Leggeri in a statement that also noted that EU states had so far provided Frontex with only 447 of the additional 775 staff it asked for in October.

In recent days, non-EU Macedonia has tightened its border and let through only Syrians, Iraqis and Afghans - seen as more likely to be granted asylum in the EU. That has led to a buildup of some 1500 migrants, mainly from Pakistan, Iran and Morocco, and to protests and two deaths.

Frontex already has 195 officers on Greek islands off the Turkish coast registering arrivals, about a third of whom, EU officials say, are refugees from the Syrian civil war.

Many migrants, however, notably South Asians who would be unlikely to qualify for asylum in the EU, try to avoid registration or claiming asylum in Greece and move quickly north into Macedonia, heading for prosperous northwest Europe. The movement of hundreds of thousands of people has set governments against each other and badly strained Europe's Schengen zone of passport-free travel.


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Source: AAP



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