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Police say grenade attack on asylum home not racism EU appeals for migrant action as summit looms
(about 5 hours later)
BERLIN Police say a recent grenade attack on an asylum seekers’ home in Germany wasn’t triggered by hatred on refugees, but suspect it was caused by rivalry between different companies involved in providing safety for asylum centers. BRUSSELS The European Union appealed Wednesday for member countries to step up efforts to manage the refugee crisis, saying they are still reacting far too slowly as thousands continue to arrive.
Police in Villingen-Schwenningen in the Black Forest said late Tuesday that they detained four suspects. They did not reveal names of the four men, but only said they were migrants from eastern Europe. As numbers swell, the EU’s executive Commission berated nations for sharing too few asylum-seekers and failing to deport people who are not eligible to stay.
Police did not give any further details, but said “conflicts between security companies could be the cause” for the attack. The appeal one of many that often have fallen on deaf ears comes a week before EU leaders meet to discuss how effective their efforts are, amid deep divisions over how to manage the influx.
The grenade was thrown over the fence of the asylum home the night of Jan. 28-29 and landed next to the container of the security staff. It didn’t explode, and a bomb squad destroyed it in a controlled explosion. “Efficiency on the ground is lacking. We have lost time,” warned the EU’s top migration official, Dimitris Avramopoulos.
A Commission report said teams of EU technical experts, dubbed hotspots, that are meant to quickly register and fingerprint people to establish if they could be eligible for asylum, are still not working properly.
After the program launched in September, only one of five hotspots is working in Greece, while two of six are operational in Italy.
This failure means fewer than 500 asylum-seekers in those two countries have been shared among other EU countries in six months. The plan is meant to distribute 160,000 asylum-seekers over two years.
Italy and Greece were also targeted for failing to deport enough people. Italy deported 14,000 people last year, as 160,000 people arrived. Greece sent back almost 20,000, but more than 800,000 entered. Balkans countries were supposed to provide shelters for 50,000 people along the migration route north in time for winter, but far less than half are in place.
In a draft statement prepared for their Feb. 18-19 summit, seen by The Associated Press, EU leaders will acknowledge, as they have often before, that past agreements “should be implemented rapidly.”
“It does not make sense to organize a summit if you do not intend to solve anything,” lamented Guy Verhofstadt, leader of the liberal bloc in the European Parliament.
Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.