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Sweden, Denmark agree to lift border checks soon

06 January 2016, 15:00 CET
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Sweden, Denmark agree to lift border checks soon

Schengen border

(BRUSSELS) - Sweden and Denmark have agreed to lift temporary border checks as soon as possible but must first slow migrant flows, the EU said Wednesday after emergency talks Europe's passport-free Schengen zone.

EU Migration Commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos called the meeting after Denmark this week slapped spot checks on its border with Germany, and Sweden imposed its own controls on travellers from Denmark.

"We agreed to keep (the measures) to a minimum and return to normal as soon as possible. This means the flows have to be slowed down," Avramopoulos said following the talks in Brussels with officials from Sweden, Denmark and Germany.

"We all agreed that Schengen and free movement must be safeguarded," Avramopoulos added.

More than a million refugees and migrants arrived in Europe in 2015 -- many of them fleeing the war in Syria -- in the worst crisis of its kind to face the continent since World War II.

The EU's cherished passport-free Schengen area has come under huge strain, as many countries have reintroduced border controls to deal with the flow of migrants trying to reach wealthy Germany, Sweden and other countries from the main landing point in Greece.

Schengen rules mean checks can be reintroduced for up to six months.

Swedish migration minister Morgan Johansson said the new checks "should not be put in place longer than we need".

He said the controls were necessary because his country has taken in more asylum seekers per capita than any other EU nation -- 160,000 asylum requests last year, including 26,000 unaccompanied minors, with 115,000 of them in the last four months.

Danish immigration minister Inger Stoejberg said they were "monitoring the situation by the hour" but addded that "in Denmark we don't wish to be the final destination for thousands and thousands of asylum seekers."

German interior ministry official Ole Schroeder said part of the problem was that an EU scheme to relocate 160,000 refugees from frontline Greece and Italy to other member states was not working.


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