EU tackles migrants, jihadists as counter-terror centre launched
Amsterdam: EU ministers open talks Monday in Amsterdam on ways to save the Schengen passport-free zone from collapse under migrant flows and tackle the jihadist scourge as a new counter-terrorism centre is launched.
The two-day meeting of interior and justice ministers is the first under the six-month Dutch European Union presidency that aims to broker a deal by 30 June on setting up a new pan-European border and coastguard force.
The force will be a key topic for debate Monday afternoon as supporters say it will slow the unprecedented influx of migrants across the 28-nation bloc’s porous external frontiers and remove the need for Schengen member states to reintroduce internal border checks.
It will be preceded in the morning by talks on terrorism, which remains at the top of the agenda following the November 13 Paris attacks in which 130 people were killed and hundreds more wounded.
EU officials said no decisions will be taken at what is an informal meeting, which opens at 9:00am (0800 GMT).
French President Francois Hollande has said the attacks were decided in Syria but prepared and organised in Belgium, whose capital Brussels hosts EU headquarters.
The Islamic State group has claimed responsibility for the attacks and on Sunday released a video purporting to show nine jihadists involved in the Paris bloodshed, in which they threaten ‘coalition’ countries including Britain.
The morning meeting in Amsterdam coincides with the formal launch of the new counter-terrorism centre at Europol headquarters in The Hague, which is designed to improve intelligence sharing among often wary EU member states.
French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve vowed Sunday to put ‘considerable pressure’ on EU members and institutions to step up the terror fight, accusing some states of slacking because they had not been hit by jihadist attacks.
The European police agency’s director Rob Wainwright said that intelligence cooperation had already improved since the attacks in Paris.
But he said the new centre will further improve information sharing at a time when the performance of the police and intelligence services is under intense scrutiny.
‘It establishes for the first time in Europe a dedicated operation centre,’ Wainwright told AFP in an interview in Davos, Switzerland.
‘Underlying obstacles’
The Dutch presidency said on its website it would like the interior ministers to discuss the ‘remaining underlying obstacles for information exchange on foreign terrorist fighters and ways forward to clear these obstacles.’
European officials have long worried about the eventual return of an estimated 5,000 EU nationals who went to wage jihad in Syria and Iraq, where they have become hardened to battle and experts in weapons use.
Belgian and French investigators are probing the extent of links between the attackers on the ground in Paris and the Islamic State group in Syria.
The resumption of months-long talks on the worst migrant crisis in Europe since World War II will focus on Dutch efforts to broker a deal on the border guard force, which is seen as a way to save Schengen, a symbol of European unity and prosperity.
European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker warned earlier this month that the collapse of the Schengen zone could kill off the internal market.
Greece is under the most political pressure as it shares an external EU border with Turkey, the main gateway for the more than one million Syrian and other asylum seekers entering the bloc last year.
Austrian Interior Minister Johanna Mikl-Leitner in the last few days warned that Athens faced ‘temporary exclusion’ from the Schengen zone in order persuade Greece to better protect its borders.
Clearly irked, Greece’s deputy Minister of European Affairs Nikos Xidakis on Sunday hit back at suggestions that the country was failing to block the flow of migrants.
‘Greece guards its borders and European borders. What it cannot do and will not do is sink boats and drown women and children because European and international law and the values of our civilisation forbid it,’ he was quoted as saying in a statement.
Austria is one of several Schengen countries that have reintroduced temporary border controls to cope with heavy migrant flows.
European sources said the ministers may renew talks about prolonging the checks to two years, instead of the current maximum of six months.

AFP