Mogherini urges EU to take 'more responsibility' on migrant mission
European Union (EU) foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini on 30 August urged member states to ‘take more responsibility’ and ensure the bloc's migrant rescue operation continues to fight human trafficking in the Mediterranean.
Rome plans to ask the EU to modify the rules of the Sophia mission – currently commanded by Italy – and rotate the ports where migrants rescued at sea can disembark, with France and Spain expected to top the list.
Currently all the ships dock in Italy but Rome's new right-wing, nationalist government says it should not have to carry the burden on its own and it is time other EU states do their fair share by taking in more of the migrants.
In comments before informal talks by EU defence ministers, Mogherini called on them to show a ‘constructive attitude’ to work to continue the mission.
She said ahead of the meeting in Vienna: ‘So far consensus has not been found... We can definitely not afford to leave an EU operation without clarity on the rules it has to follow. It would be good if member states take more responsibility.
‘The important thing is that we manage to keep the operation going... This has been a remarkable achievement for all of the European Union.’
German Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen said Sophia's mandate was until year end – when she expected EU leaders to solve the question of how asylum seekers coming to Europe whose claims are recognised should be distributed among member states and how those rejected should be returned home.
Ursula von der Leyen said: ‘That is the question that is anyhow right on top of the agenda of EU leaders... and so I expect this question to be solved in the autumn.’
EU leaders will meet in the Austrian city of Salzburg in September 2018 to discuss the migrant crisis. Austria currently holds the EU's rotating presidency.
Sophia was launched in June 2015 following a series of deadly shipwrecks and has since picked up thousands of migrants floundering in the Mediterranean.
According to La Stampa newspaper, Italy's idea is to rotate landings between Mediterranean ports, with a particular emphasis on France and Spain, and with Greece and Malta also sharing the load.
Italian Defence Minister Elisabetta Trenta said on 29 August that the ball was in the EU camp.
Trenta said: ‘By accepting our proposal it [the EU] will have the opportunity to show it is a real community of values and intentions; by refusing it will deny its own fundamental principles.’
Italy has been turning away ships with migrants rescued at sea in a campaign to make EU countries take their share.
In the week of 20 August, it threatened to stop billions of euros of EU funding over the issue, accusing Europe of turning its back as Italy grapples with seemingly endless migrant arrivals.
More from Defence Notes
-
UK Chancellor commits £2 billion to make the country a “defence industrial superpower”
Rachel Reeves announced port upgrades, protected budgets for innovation and investment in novel technologies.
-
Launch of Gilat Defense targets DoD market
The communications company Gilat launched its new Gilat Defense division at the Satellite 2025 expo, with future solutions aimed at US military customers.
-
Collins MAPS Gen II to equip US DoD watercraft
US services have already conducted multiple tests with military maritime systems fitted with the system.
-
OCCAR expects substantial boost in programme numbers “in the coming months”
Europe’s Organisation for Joint Armament Cooperation (OCCAR) “has to establish itself…as a centre of excellence for cooperative Defence Equipment Programmes” in the face of growing threats and the need for rearmament, according to the organisation’s chairman.
-
MBDA CEO emphasises “moment of truth” for Europe as company sees €37 billion backlog
MBDA CEO Éric Béranger stressed the company’s role supporting European countries with complex weapon systems and focused on boosting production against the backdrop of “shifting” geopolitical alliances.