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Migrant crisis: Turkey threatens EU with new surge | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has warned that he will let hundreds of thousands of migrants travel on to Europe if pushed by the EU. | Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has warned that he will let hundreds of thousands of migrants travel on to Europe if pushed by the EU. |
He was reacting to a non-binding vote by the European Parliament to freeze talks on EU membership for Turkey. | He was reacting to a non-binding vote by the European Parliament to freeze talks on EU membership for Turkey. |
The MEPs were alarmed by Mr Erdogan's "disproportionate" response to a failed coup attempt in July. | The MEPs were alarmed by Mr Erdogan's "disproportionate" response to a failed coup attempt in July. |
The migrant numbers reaching the Greek islands have dropped since an EU-Turkey deal in March to curb the influx. | The migrant numbers reaching the Greek islands have dropped since an EU-Turkey deal in March to curb the influx. |
President Erdogan accused the EU of breaking its promises. As part of the March deal, Turkey was promised aid, visa-free travel for its nationals and accelerated membership talks. | |
"Listen to me: these border gates will be opened if you go any further," he warned the EU on Friday. | "Listen to me: these border gates will be opened if you go any further," he warned the EU on Friday. |
A spokeswoman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Ulrike Demmer, said the deal was in the "interest of all parties" and that "threats on either side are not helpful". | A spokeswoman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Ulrike Demmer, said the deal was in the "interest of all parties" and that "threats on either side are not helpful". |
Turkey plays its trump card: Mark Lowen, BBC News, Istanbul | |
If the European Parliament hoped its vote to freeze accession talks with Turkey would prompt President Erdogan to row back on his policies, today came the answer. | |
It is Turkey's trump card: the key role it played in stemming the migrant flow under a deal with the EU to return failed asylum seekers here. And an increasingly combative Mr Erdogan seems ready to play it. | |
His tone - and his threat - are classic tactics of a president who knows Europe needs Turkey. And it is a sign that a man not known for a thick skin will not take the European Parliament vote lightly. | |
It is non-binding and Europe's leaders are unlikely to heed it, given how important Turkey is. | |
But the bad blood between the two sides is thickening - and the shaky EU-Turkey deal to halt the migrant flow looks more fragile still. | |
Turkey currently hosts almost three million migrants, mostly from Syria. Last year more than one million fled to Europe, mainly via Turkey. | |
Under the March 2016 agreement, migrants arriving in Greece are now sent back to Turkey if they do not apply for asylum or their claim is rejected. | |
For each Syrian migrant returned to Turkey, the EU is to take in another Syrian who has made a legitimate request. | |
Since then arrivals into Europe have slumped, as have the number of deaths of migrants making the dangerous sea crossing between Turkey and Greece. | |
Attempts to get visa-free travel for Turks stalled as the country refused to change its anti-terror laws and many in Europe have criticised Turkey's tough response to the failed coup. |
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