• Thursday, 17 October 2024

EU leaders to discuss migration, Middle East and Ukraine in Brussels

EU leaders to discuss migration, Middle East and Ukraine in Brussels

Brussels, 17 October 2024 (dpa/MIA) - European Union leaders are to meet in Brussels on Thursday for heated talks on irregular migration to the bloc, differing positions on the Middle East conflict and further support for war-torn Ukraine.

Migration has been a contentious issue in the EU for years. Amid a series of electoral successes for far-right parties across the bloc and a changing security landscape, individual countries take increasingly restrictive positions.

Poland recently announced plans to temporarily suspend the right to asylum, accusing Russia and Belarus of pushing migrants to the Polish border, which is also the EU's external border, in order to destabilize the bloc and undermine security.

Germany recently reintroduced border checks to other EU countries after a deadly knife attack in the western city of Solingen and the far-right opposition Alternative for Germany (AfD) party's gaining massively in regional elections.

EU leaders are expected to discuss involving countries outside the EU in processing irregular migrants, after Italy announced this week that the first migrants were brought to new controversial asylum centres in Albania.

EU countries agreed earlier this year to a major reform aimed at tightening the bloc's migration and asylum laws that had been years in the making, but implementing the new legislation might take years with some calling for the process to be sped up.

Migration is not the only topic on the summit's agenda where the EU's 27 members are grappling to come up with a joint approach.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is to join EU leaders for a presentation his vision for ending the war and a plea for further support. Russia-friendly Hungary has however been blocking more military aid.

Leaders are also to discuss the Middle East conflict after capitals have been struggling to agree on a response that could help stop the fighting.

MIA file photo