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Turkish PM urges 'concrete steps' from EU on migrants

21 January 2016, 14:27 CET
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(DAVOS) - Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on Thursday urged "concrete steps" from the European Union to help Turkey tackle the refugee crisis, a day before he holds critical talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Speaking at the annual Davos summit of economic and business leaders, Davutoglu said he wouldn't even ask Merkel about the 3 billion euros in financial aid the EU promised last year to grant to Turkey in return for stemming the flow of migrants into the bloc.

"We are not asking (for) money, we are not negotiating (for) money... For us, it's a humanitarian duty, therefore the problem is not financial assistance," Davutoglu said.

"We are asking solidarity, we are asking to have a sense of common destiny," he said.

"We will be discussing these with my dear colleague Merkel and we hope the next steps will be concrete steps to address this issue," he added, speaking in English.

Under increased pressure to reduce the number of refugees arriving in Europe, Merkel will host Davutoglu in Berlin for a joint meeting of key ministers from both governments.

EU officials have complained Turkey was not doing enough to limit the numbers crossing the Aegean Sea despite the landmark deal in November providing Ankara cash as well political concessions in return for its cooperation in tackling Europe's worst migrant crisis since World War II.

Davutoglu suggested Turkey was doing more than its share, pointing to a government decision last week granting work permits to refugees, which was not part of the EU deal.

He also said that Turkey, which is home to more than two million Syrian refugees, has so far spent around 10 billion dollars helping them.

"We can spend some more for the poor orphans, victims of the Syrian tragedy," he said.

"But it's not only a German issue, it's not a Turkish issue, and now not even a Syrian issue. It's a global issue."


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