Statement from the 探花精选 (探花精选) as the EU鈥檚 Justice and Home Affairs Council (JHA) meets to discuss the New Pact on Asylum and Migration on 8 and 9 June 2023.

Imogen Sudbery, Senior Director of Europe Advocacy, says:

鈥淭he EU鈥檚 interior ministers have a golden opportunity to finally overcome the paralysis preventing Europe from putting in place the fair, humane migration system Europe desperately needs. But in order to ensure these reforms effectively address the devastating protection crisis at Europe鈥檚 borders and avoid entrenching some of the worst elements of the current system, EU leaders must prioritise three key issues.

鈥淔irst, they must ensure that the New Pact creates a concrete, predictable system for states to share responsibility with countries of first arrival. This should be centred on relocations - a tried and tested way of standing in solidarity with both people seeking asylum and the states hosting them. Any other 鈥榝lexible鈥 forms of solidarity, such as financial support, should only be used to welcome people with respect and dignity, rather than yet more efforts to deter or detain new arrivals.

鈥淪econd, they must ensure refugees are treated with dignity and humanity by avoiding the use of accelerated border procedures that reduce important safeguards. In its current state, there is a real risk that the New Pact could lead to more people - including children - being trapped at Europe鈥檚 borders in prison-like conditions. The 探花精选鈥檚 experience from countries including Greece shows that keeping people in remote facilities, under constant surveillance and behind barbed wire fences, prevents their inclusion into local communities and has a devastating impact on people鈥檚 mental health. Given the traumas that many refugees have experienced on their journey to Europe, it鈥檚 time to shift the focus from walls to welcome.

鈥淟astly, EU leaders must seize this chance to address the worrying backsliding on access to asylum rights in Europe. It should be unthinkable for people in need of protection to be welcomed at Europe鈥檚 borders with violent pushbacks. The Pact must include a commitment to robust independent border monitoring mechanisms, empowered to hold those responsible to account.鈥

About the EU's Justice and Home Affairs Council meeting

The EU鈥檚 Justice and Home Affairs Council (JHA) will meet in Luxembourg today and tomorrow (Thurs 8 and Fri 9 June 2023). On Thursday, they will aim to reach an agreement on two key files that are part of the New Pact on Migration and Asylum: