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IMMIGRATION

Border controls cause row between Austria and Hungary

Hungarian authorities have come under fire from Austria’s Interior Minister Wolfgang Sobotka after they began checking people crossing the border from Austria into Hungary.

Border controls cause row between Austria and Hungary
Rotes Kreuz

The move by Hungary is seen as a response to Austria recently strengthening controls on its side of the border in a bid to catch smugglers, causing traffic jams in both Austria and western Hungary earlier this week.

On Monday and Tuesday, Austrian controls led to traffic jams for several hours and early this morning further checks brought traffic to a standstill again.

After Hungary responded with their own controls on arrivals from Austria, Sobotka summoned the Hungarian ambassador to the Interior Ministry to discuss the growing diplomatic row between the two countries.

“Unjustified”

Speaking to the ORF on Tuesday evening, Sobotka said the controls on people entering Hungary from Austria are “totally unjustified”.

He added that they are not in the spirit of the EU Schengen agreement that allows residents to cross into neighbouring EU countries without going through border checks.

The minister defended the controls in Austria, however, saying smugglers trying to ferry migrants and refugees across the border are being found every day. “That’s why we have strengthened the border controls,” he said.

The latest controls were focused on the area around the border town of Nickelsdorf, which temporarily became the centre of the European refugee crisis last year after hundreds of asylum seekers arrived there daily from Hungary. 

“Not reasonable”

He added that Hungary’s refusal to take back asylum seekers under the Dublin Regulation, which states asylum seekers must register in the first EU country they arrive to, was “not reasonable”.

This regulation broke down last year with the arrival of high number of asylum seekers and migrants to Europe’s borders in the summer.

Austria’s cap on the number of asylum applications it is willing to accept in the country – set at 37,500 for 2016 – does not include those who they want to return to other EU countries.

The government are keen to send asylum seekers back to other EU countries, although Hungary is currently refusing to accept any.

Austrian Chancellor Christian Kern has announced he will visit the Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban to “clarify” the situation regarding the return of asylum seekers.

FAR-RIGHT

Germany issues entry ban to Austrian far-right activist Sellner

Radical Austrian nationalist Martin Sellner has been banned from entering Germany, it emerged on Tuesday, days after he was deported from Switzerland.

Germany issues entry ban to Austrian far-right activist Sellner

Sellner, a leader of Austria’s white pride Identitarian Movement, posted a video of himself on X, formerly Twitter, reading out a letter he said was from the city of Potsdam.

A spokeswoman for the city authorities confirmed to AFP that an EU citizen had been served with a “ban on their freedom of movement in Germany”.

The person can no longer enter or stay in Germany “with immediate effect” and could be stopped by police or deported if they try to enter the country, the spokeswoman said, declining to name the individual for privacy reasons.

READ ALSO: Who is Austria’s far-right figurehead banned across Europe?

“We have to show that the state is not powerless and will use its legitimate means,” Mike Schubert, the mayor of Potsdam, said in a statement.

Sellner caused an uproar in Germany after allegedly discussing the Identitarian concept of “remigration” with members of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) at a meeting in Potsdam in November.

Reports of the meeting sparked a huge wave of protests against the AfD, with tens of thousands of Germans attending demonstrations across the country.

READ ALSO:

Swiss police said Sunday they had prevented a hundred-strong far-right gathering due to be addressed by Sellner, adding that he had been arrested and deported.

The Saturday meeting had been organised by the far-right Junge Tat group, known for its anti-immigration and anti-Islamic views.

The group is also a proponent of the far-right white nationalist Great Replacement conspiracy theory espoused by Sellner’s Identitarian Movement.

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