Brussels: European Union foreign ministers are holding emergency talks on Tuesday to weigh the security implications of the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan amid concern that widespread fear of hardline Islamist rule will provoke an exodus of people from the conflict-ravaged country.
Afghans are among the biggest group of nationalities seeking sanctuary in Europe, after Syrians. According to some EU estimates, around 570,000 Afghans have applied for asylum in Europe since 2015. French President Emmanuel Macron said Monday that France, Germany and other European partners would work swiftly on a robust response to any new influx of unauthorised migrants from Afghanistan.
He said the organised and just international effort would be marked by an effort of solidarity, the harmonisation of protection criteria and cooperation with transit countries that Afghan migrants might move through. Turkey, with whom the EU already has a migrant outsourcing deal, is one such country.Europe cannot alone assume the consequences, Macron said.
Austria, meanwhile, plans to suggest at a meeting of EU interior ministers on Wednesday that deportation centres be set up in countries neighbouring Afghanistan.
The arrival of well over a million migrants in 2015, mostly from Syria and Iraq, sparked one of the 27-nation EU's biggest crises as nations bickered over how best to manage the influx. The infighting continues today and a new wave of migrants from Afghanistan is likely to exacerbate those tensions.