Germany is
willing to give Greece financial backing to deal with the unprecedented refugee
crisis on its own soil instead of exporting it north towards central Europe.
Stressing that there was no connection
between any support linked to refugees and the bailout deal agreed this year,
as had been suggested in German media, the government admitted Greece’s economy
was too delicate for it to be able to deal with the crisis on its own.
“We want to support Greece in this, so that
it is able to meet its duties as a member of the EU to protect its borders in
the most effective way,” the government spokesman Steffen Seibert told
journalists in Berlin.
“We should not draw a connection [between
the bailout and aid],” said Seibert. “What I can say is that it’s the
conviction of the whole of Europe that we urgently need an orderly situation in
the EU’s outer border regions, as well as in the Aegean between Greece and
Turkey. Why? Above all, to help the people. Above all, so that the people
smugglers there no longer have the say and are able to carry out their
life-threatening trade.”
A day after the EU unveiled a deal worth up
to €3bn (£2.2bn) to help Turkey deal with the Syrian refugee crisis, speculation
has mounted that Greece will also need aid. More than 400,000 people have
poured into the country this year.
Germany has also faced an influx of hundreds
of thousands of refugees. By some estimates the total could exceed 1.5 million
this year.
An article in the respected economic
publication Wirtschaftswoche quoted a government insider as saying: “Our
highest priority right now is that more refugees stay in Greece.” The source
went on to say: “Germany will bear the brunt of the costs of the refugee crisis
- we must be realistic about that.”
The prospect of economic aid could galvanise
Athens into retaining greater numbers of refugees instead of bussing them north
towards the Balkans. The Greek prime minister, Alexis Tsipras, told reporters
in Brussels on Friday that Greece, like other frontline states, had raised the
issue of the spiralling costs of dealing with the refugees and had pushed for
additional financial assistance.
Fiscal targets had to be “lightened” and
economic support increased, he said, so that his government could handle the
migrants with the dignity they deserved. Seibert said some concrete assistance
had already been provided in the form of educational aid and equipment. “We
will surely come up with more things we can do,” he said.
On Thursday, Angela Merkel acknowledged that
Greece’s economy was not up to dealing with the thousands of people arriving
every day. The German chancellor heads to Istanbul on Sunday to talk with
Turkish leaders about the porous border between the two countries.
Greece is still suffering the ravages of
years of austerity imposed by successive European bailouts. “The country feels
overwhelmed,” said Merkel, adding that its economy “is not doing so well any
more”. She said: “Naturally, we need to talk to Turkey about that.”
The mood music between Greece and Germany
has improved significantly since Tsipras secured re-election last month and
moved to push new austerity measures through parliament to unlock a chunk of an
€86bn deal agreed in the summer.
On Friday night, Greek MPs were preparing to
vote for the first time since the election on the austerity package. But the
measures - 48 milestones that include jailing tax evaders, expanding a
much-loathed property tax and scaling back on early retirement – have raised
howls of protest as Greece approaches what is likely to be its most explosive
winter yet.
Πηγή:
theguardian.com
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