Asylum policy
#MIGRANTCRISIS: EU at grave risk, warns France PM Valls
French Prime Minister Manuel Valls has warned that Europe's migration crisis is putting the EU at grave risk.
Valls said that Europe could not take all the refugees fleeing what he called terrible wars in Iraq or Syria. "Otherwise," he said, "our societies will be totally destabilized."
More than a million migrants, mostly refugees, arrived in Europe last year, many making perilous journeys. On Friday, at least 15 people were killed as their boats sank off Greek islands.
Valls also said that France would seek to keep its current state of emergency until a "total and global war" against so-called Islamic State (IS) was over. The measures were introduced after the IS-led Paris attacks on 13 November and then extended for three months.
Cologne incidents
Valls was speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. "Europe", he said, "needed to take urgent action to control its external borders. If Europe is not capable of protecting its own borders, it's the very idea of Europe that will be questioned."
Asked about border controls inside Europe which many fear put the passport-free Schengen zone at great risk, Valls said the concept of Europe itself was now in very grave danger. He did not directly criticise Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel for her welcoming message last year to refugees.
Valls said she "had courage", but it was clear he believed her message was wrong. "A message that says 'Come, you will be welcome' provokes major shifts" in population, says Valls.
He added: "We know clearly that after the Cologne incidents that with the continuous flow, not only to Germany but the countries of Northern Europe, Austria, the Balkans are confronted with this influx, that's why we need to find practical solutions for our borders."
Valls was referring to attacks in the German city on New Year's Eve - largely attributed to foreigners - that have sparked 800 complaints, 520 of them relating to sexual crimes.
Angela Merkel will later hold talks on the migrant crisis with Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu in Berlin. EU countries hope Turkey will help to control the flow of migrants reaching the EU from Syria and other conflict zones.
On Friday, at least 15 people, including six children, died when their boats sank off the Greek islands of Farmakonisi and Kalolimnos, the Greek coastguard said. Some 48 survivors reached shore but a number of other migrants were reported missing, it said.
Eradicate IS
On the issue of the state of emergency, Valls said France was 'at war', which meant "using all means in our democracy under the rule of law to protect French people". The measure gives police more power to conduct raids and impose house arrests.
When asked how long he envisaged the state of emergency remaining, Mr Valls said: "The time necessary. As long as the threat is there, we must use all the means," he said, adding that it should stay in place 'until we can get rid of Daesh', using an acronym for the IS group.
"In Africa, in the Middle East, in Asia we must eradicate, eliminate Daesh," he said. "It is a total and global war that we are facing with terrorism. The war we are conducting must also be total, global and ruthless" he added. Valls said France 'could see attacks again', adding that six plots had been foiled over the past few months.
Attackers linked to IS killed 130 people in co-ordinated assaults across Paris in November, leading to the first declaration of a state of emergency in France in 10 years. The measures are set to expire on 26 February.This week, a group of UN human rights experts said they were 'excessive and disproportionate'.
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