Foreign Ministry spokesperson Koutras’ response to yesterday’s statements from a spokesperson for the Chancellor regarding the need for a “coordinated” scheme in the Aegean for confronting the refugee issue
“We would like to remind our friends and partners in the EU and NATO
that, for years now, Greece, which is at the crossroads of the refugee
crisis, has been underscoring the need for “coordinated” European action
with regard to the management of the refugee and migration crisis.
Action that consists in, among other things, strengthening FRONTEX,
revision of the inapplicable status of the Dublin II agreement, the
supporting of refugee transit and reception countries, the
implementation of the Greek-Turkish readmission protocol and the
EU-Turkey Readmission Agreement.
It has to be understood by
everyone that Greece, at a huge cost, is protecting its borders, which
are the external borders of Europe. It goes without saying that the
strengthening of the European contribution to this demanding mission
would not only be welcome, but is also vital.
This crisis is
obviously an urgent European, if not global, problem, and a European
problem requires a European solution. The great European challenge with
regard to the refugee issues lies in the shaping of a “coordinated”
state of affairs in refugees’ countries of origin, in countries the
refugees transit, and, of course, in Europe, whose humanitarian ideals
render imperative the reception of war refugees. Greece’s position is
that we need to examine the root causes of the problem, and that the
whole of the EU needs to work intensively and constructively to find a
just and democratic political solution not just to the Syrian problem,
but also to the Libyan issue. At the same time, the EU needs to shape a
comprehensive strategy for supporting Jordan and Lebanon – countries
that are also receiving huge refugee flows – as well as stability in
Egypt.
In this context, the Greek government is pursuing
multilevel cooperation with Turkey to optimize management of the refugee
crisis and crack down on trafficking networks. But it is understood
that this can be done in an organized manner only in areas such as
exchange of information or readmission.
Finally, we need hardly
say that Greece, which guards Europe’s borders in the Aegean and the
Mediterranean, never considered assigning to its navy or armed forces in
general the task of confronting refugees of war, and nor can it even
discuss the novel ideas expressed lately, such as that of joint
Greek-Turkish patrolling of maritime borders.
The time has arrived, at long last, to stop playing the blame game and focus on the solution.”