Slovakia Refuses To Accept Muslim Migrants From Syria, Will Only Allow Christians
A Slovakian official said Wednesday that the country is prepared to accept only Christian migrants from Syria under a European Union relocation plan.
Interior
Ministry spokesman Ivan Metik told the BBC that Muslim migrants
wouldn't be accepted, claiming that they "are not going to like it
here." He added that Muslim migrants should avoid moving to the country,
warning that they would find it difficult to integrate with the
majority Christian population.
Slovakia is required to take in 200
Syrian refugees from camps in Turkey, Italy and Greece as part of an
E.U. plan to resettle new migrants.
"We could take 800 Muslims,
but we don't have any mosques in Slovakia, so how can Muslims be
integrated if they are not going to like it here?" Metik told the BBC.
"We want to really help Europe with this migration wave, but ... we are
only a transit country and the people don't want to stay in Slovakia,"
he added.
E.U nations agreed in July to resettle over 32,000
asylum seekers over the next two years, a figure lower than the previous
target of 40,000. The move comes at a time when Europe and the
Mediterranean are facing an unprecedented migrant crisis.
The
United Nations refugee body said this month that 107,500 had crossed
into the E.U. since July, triple the number reported last year. The U.N.
has also warned that over 4 million Syrians have been forced to flee
their country due to the ongoing conflict there -- a crisis that U.N.
High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres has called the "biggest
refugee population from a single conflict in a generation."
Across
Europe, conservative leaders have warned that Europe's policy towards
migration issues was placing a severe strain on the host countries'
infrastructure and culture. "Left-wing policies have led to illegal
immigrants flooding Europe, threatening European countries with an
unprecedented social, economic, cultural and security conflict,"
Hungary's ruling Fidesz party said last week.
European
authorities, meanwhile, condemned the Slovakian plan. An unnamed source
told the Daily Express that Slovakia could face legal action if it went
through with its plan.
Babar Baloch, Central Europe spokesman for
the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, said: "Resettlement is greatly
needed for many refugees who are at extreme risk among the world's most
vulnerable groups," according to the BBC.
"We encourage
governments to take an inclusive approach while considering refugees for
resettlement and should not base their selection on discrimination."
However,
Slovakian President Robert Fico said that the country was being forced
to accept responsibility for problems it did not create. "I only have
one question: Who bombed Libya?" Fico asked in an interview with an
Austrian newspaper cited by the Wall Street Journal on Wednesday . "Who created problems in North Africa? Slovakia? No."
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