could be a great first step but time will tell;
On Monday, December 8th, the European Union took a decisive step in the reconfiguration of its migration policy by approving a package of measures that tightens border control, speeds up returns, and allows the externalization of asylum application processing.
The agreement, backed by the interior ministers of the 27 member states, confirms the political shift the bloc has been experiencing in recent years and which responds, to a large extent, to the rise of patriotic and conservative parties and the progressive decline of traditional forces.
The new provisions, which include the creation of processing and return centers outside European territory and the expansion of the list of ‘safe countries,’ represent one of the biggest reworkings of the asylum system since the so-called migration crisis of 2015. The European Commissioner for Migration, Magnus Brunner, acknowledged after the meeting that Europe is at “a turning point” and that the current system “cannot continue tolerating abuses or unsustainable pressure.” Brussels thus admits, for the first time with this level of clarity, that the current framework is overwhelmed and that the priority is to regain control.
The shift is largely explained by a transformation of Europe’s political climate. For years, patriotic parties warned that the EU had created incentives encouraging irregular migration and overwhelming national systems. Their warnings remained on the margins of the institutional debate. Today, however, they are embraced by governments of different ideological orientations. Denmark, which holds the rotating presidency of the Council, has led the negotiation with a firm stance. Its minister for integration, Rasmus Stoklund, insisted that human-trafficking networks benefit from the current framework and that the only way to stop their activity is to “dismantle the incentives” that draw thousands of migrants into dangerous routes..........more........
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