The Czech Republic is sticking to its position of rejecting any
mandatory quota system for redistributing asylum-seekers among European
Union member states, Prime Minister Bohuslav Sobotka said on Tuesday
ahead of EU meetings on the migration crisis.
EU interior ministers will discuss redistributing 120,000 migrants at a
meeting in Brussels on Tuesday, and the dissenting countries may be
outvoted on the issue under the EU's decision-making rules if there is
no agreement.
"We will strictly reject any attempt to introduce some permanent
mechanism of redistributing refugees," Mr. Sobotka told reporters. "We
as well reject using a quota system in any temporary mechanism."
Diplomats in Brussels set out a range of possible compromises being
discussed on a proposal by the EU executive to take 120,000
asylum-seekers from Italy, Greece and Hungary and relocate them in other
states according to a quota system.
Mr. Sobotka said he believed if the Czechs were outvoted, the system
would not work as there was no legal mechanism to implement it.
"It can end in big ridicule for the European Commission and the
countries supporting the system because there are no instruments how to,
for example, how to keep refugees ... in countries where they never
wanted to go."
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