Thursday, 30 March 2017

EU unity threatened once again due to forced migration policies on member states as the UK's exit process begins

Eastern EU nations protests migration

Pandemonium as leaders from Poland, Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic known as the powerful Visegrad group, have blamed their colleagues in the EU who known to be eurocrats of making move to intimidate them into submission.

Their anger was unleashed on the EU leaders when it was suggested their aid funding could be likely cut down if they continue to reject asylum seekers under the EU’s compulsory replacement structure.

Austria also is not happy and have expressed their anger against the EU when they announced their intentions to get the country out of the quota system altogether, though EU officials said such a move would be illegal.

This has once again shown that migration policy put in place by the EU is not actually going down well with other member countries, just as the British people complained and demanded for Brexit, so that they can take full control of their borders and law.

Even after EU leaders controversially voted to allocate certain number of refugees to each member states last year, Eastern European nations strongly rose against the move, as most of them refused to any of the quota given to them.

The refusal to honour the quota system has made infuriated EU leaders and MEPs to bring up the idea of cutting the social funding in retaliation against the rebellious nations.

Nevertheless in response the leaders of the Visegrad countries have called for an extraordinary press conference, during which they let rip at eurocrats over its meddling in their migration policies.

Polish Prime Minister Beata Szydło, who is also carry on an extraordinary diplomatic war with the EU over the re-election of Donald Tusk, warned that Eastern Europe “will never accept blackmail and diktat” from Brussels.

Also, the Czech Prime Minister Bohuslav Sobotka made it clear that all four countries “oppose linking the debate about migration to European funds”.

And Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico fumed: “This is blackmail that we reject in the name of the Slovak government.”

On the other hand, Hugary’s revolutionary PM, Viktor Orban, revealed that his country will begin to detain migrants on camps it has set up on its southern border with Serbia - a plan that which does not go down well with human rights groups. 

He said: “From now on, Hungary is in a position to react even if the agreement between the EU and Turkey does not work. We are able to stop any wave of migrants on the Serbian-Hungarian border.”

The disorder once more threatens to shatter the delicate sense of European unity in the aftermath of the Rome summit, and provides more headaches for Brussels on the day that Britain is set to formally trigger Article 50.



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