BoRINg Posted March 7, 2016 Posted March 7, 2016 European Union leaders are holding a key summit with Turkey in Brussels on ways of dealing with Europe's worst refugee crisis since World War Two. The EU is pressing Turkey, through which many migrants transit, to take some back in return for $3.3bn in aid. The Turkish government is asking for the sum to be doubled. The talks are being extended into a working dinner. Meanwhile Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused the EU of failing to deliver on the promised aid. "It's been four months," Mr Erdogan said in Ankara. "My prime minister is currently in Brussels. I hope he will return with the money." Turkey is currently sheltering more than 2.7 million refugees from the civil war in neighbouring Syria. The EU wants Turkey to take back migrants who do not qualify for asylum and do more to patrol its own waters. In exchange for this, the Turkish government is asking for the EU to increase its pledge to €6bn ($6.6bn; £4.64bn), European Parliament President Martin Schulz said. Turkey is also seeking a faster path towards EU membership and the speeding up of plans to allow Turks visa-free travel in Europe. Last year, more than a million people entered the EU illegally by boat, mainly going from Turkey to Greece. Many migrants leave Greece in an attempt to reach northern Europe, but eight countries have introduced temporary border controls. Some 13,000 migrants are currently stranded in northern Greece, after Macedonia closed its border to all but a trickle. The [CENSORED]ure of the Schengen agreement - which allows passport-free travel in a 26-nation zone - is on the agenda, as the leaders are anxious to save a system thought to bring billions of euros to Europe's economy every year. 'Solid opt-out' After the talks started on Monday, the EU announced that an unscheduled working dinner would be held to discuss "new ideas" offered by Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu. Earlier, Mr Davutoglu said Turkey was "indispensable" for the EU, just as Europe was for Turkey. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she anticipated a "difficult discussion", as a rift emerged among EU powers on the closure of the main route through the Balkans. A draft summit communique reported by journalists on Sunday declared that "irregular flows of migrants along the Western Balkans are coming to an end; this route is closed". But Mrs Merkel said: "Today is about finding a lasting solution together with Turkey... trying to find a way to stop illegal migration and improving the living conditions for the refugees." A German government source told the BBC there was no point saying the route was closed when 300-500 people still arrived in Germany every day this way. This summit has hardly started and already it has been extended. There will be a second session with Prime Minister Davutoglu and all 28 EU leaders over dinner. The EU is asking for a lot from Turkey, and Turkey is now asking for more in return. Hence the irony that the fate of the EU's migration policy, and its [CENSORED]ure cohesion, lies in the hands of a country it has been keeping at arms length for years. Without active Turkish co-operation, there is no chance of reducing the flow of refugees and migrants arriving in the Greek islands. And without that happening, the rest of the policy starts falling to pieces. UK PM David Cameron said there was "no prospect of Britain joining a common asylum process in Europe". "We have an absolutely rock-solid opt-out from these things," he said. The EU said last October it would relocate 160,000 asylum seekers, mainly from Greece and Italy, but there was strong opposition among some members and fewer than 700 migrants have moved. 1
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