Greece Offers Vouchers and Tax Cuts to Offset Rising Fuel and Food Prices
The Greek government is preparing a set of support measures to help households and businesses cope with rapidly rising fuel and food prices.
Turkey is a safe country for most asylum seekers now housed on Greek islands, Greece’s migration ministry has said, as Athens seeks to speed up repatriations to its eastern neighbour.
According to a 2016 agreement between the European Union and Turkey, the latter should take back Syrian refugees from Greece if they do not face serious risks in Turkey.
“Turkey is a safe country for asylum seekers from Syria, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Somalia according to joint decree adopted by the foreign and migration ministries,” the Greek migration authorities said in a statement on Monday (7 June).
“They are not in danger because of their religion, their nationality, their political opinions, or inclusion in a social group, and can seek asylum in Turkey rather than in Greece,” it added.
Migration Minister Notis Mitarachi was quoted as saying: “It will be a big step towards reducing the illegal flow of migrants” and force Turkey to readmit those who have been refused asylum on Greek islands.
For the past 15 months, Turkey has refused to readmit 1,453 refugees that Greek authorities want to send back. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in February 2020 that he would let migrants who sought to reach the European Union to pass through Turkey.
Tens of thousands surged towards Greece via the crossing between Kastanies and Pazarkule, on the Turkish side of the border, and clashes broke out there for several days.
In early April, Greece accused Turkey of seeking to “provoke an escalation” in the Aegean with “dangerous” maneuvers and illegal assistance to migrants.
Between January and April, a little more than 1,000 asylum seekers landed on Greek shores according to the UN refugee agency.
Greek government sources told EURACTIV that 62% of asylum applications in 2020 and 50% in the first quarter of 2021 were made by asylum seekers from Syria, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Somalia.
The same sources explained that from now, the technical features of the application of these five nations will not be examined and asylum seekers will be returned rapidly to Turkey.
With this move, Greece aims to to send the message that it would be pointless for asylum seekers from these nations to apply for asylum in Greece as they either end up “trapped” in Greece or quickly be returned to Turkey.
Athens claims that almost 90% of asylum seekers in Greece in practice want to move to other EU nations.
Amid rising tensions in the Middle East, authorities have taken a closer look at Bulgaria’s bomb shelters, focusing on their availability and condition
The Bulgarian Prosecutor’s Office has issued a detailed institutional statement responding to what it described as political attacks against both the national prosecution service and the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO)
Former President Rumen Radev, who is leading the Progressive Bulgaria coalition in the upcoming early parliamentary elections on April 19, criticized the caretaker government for underestimating the risks facing the country following the strikes against I
Bulgarian F-16s carried out training flights over Sofia on Tuesday, March 10, as part of a planned exercise organized by the Ministry of Defense.
A new national survey by Gallup International Balkan suggests that if elections in Bulgaria were held today, voter turnout would reach around 51%, while no political force would secure enough support to form a single-party government
Asen Vassilev, leader of We Continue the Change (WCC), did not rule out a potential partnership with Rumen Radev’s political formation to advance judicial reform and elect a new Supreme Judicial Council.
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