The Visegrad Group creates an organization 'managing migration crisis "
The interior ministers of the Visegrad Group (Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia) announced today in Warsaw establishing an "immigration crisis management center" for coordinating aid to refugees outside EU territory, Lebanon and Jordan.
The center, which will be led by Poland, seems to be a form of counter to mandatory quota system for redistributing refugees in the countries of the EU, which has been proposed by the European Commission and the Visegrad group rejected once again today, describing it as "ineffective".
The center purpose is "to share best practices in the administration of assistance to migrants where they have recourse, in Lebanon, in Jordan, in camps where people who left to be saved from the war," said Poland's Interior Minister Marius Blastsak during a press conference.
"This is to coordinate these activities and to allocate funds from our countries real help," he said.
The meeting participants; beyond the Visegrad Group countries present were also representatives of the Governments of Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia and Slovenia; insisted once again in the position that it is necessary to make the EU's external borders more impenetrable and encourage repatriation of immigrants.
The interior ministers of the Visegrad Group (Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia) announced today in Warsaw establishing an "immigration crisis management center" for coordinating aid to refugees outside EU territory, Lebanon and Jordan.
The center, which will be led by Poland, seems to be a form of counter to mandatory quota system for redistributing refugees in the countries of the EU, which has been proposed by the European Commission and the Visegrad group rejected once again today, describing it as "ineffective".
The center purpose is "to share best practices in the administration of assistance to migrants where they have recourse, in Lebanon, in Jordan, in camps where people who left to be saved from the war," said Poland's Interior Minister Marius Blastsak during a press conference.
"This is to coordinate these activities and to allocate funds from our countries real help," he said.
The meeting participants; beyond the Visegrad Group countries present were also representatives of the Governments of Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia and Slovenia; insisted once again in the position that it is necessary to make the EU's external borders more impenetrable and encourage repatriation of immigrants.