Doctors Without Borders raps attempts by EU countries to deter migrants - Action News
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Doctors Without Borders raps attempts by EU countries to deter migrants

Doctors Without Borders says attempts by various EU nations to deter migrants have put thousands of people in danger and created more business for smugglers.

Group urges EU to create more legal ways for migrants to come to Europe

Migrants arrive on a special train from Austria to Saalfeld, Germany in September 2015. (Hendrik Schmidt/EPA)

The aid group Doctors Without Borders said Tuesday attempts by various European Union nations to deter migrants have put thousands of people in danger and created more business for smugglers.

In a report, it said border closures and tougher policing only encourage people seeking sanctuary or jobs to use other routes to get to Europe.

The group's head of operations, Brice de le Vingne, said "policies of deterrence, along with their chaotic response to the humanitarian needs of those who flee, actively worsened the conditions of thousands of vulnerable men, women and children."

The group urged the EU to create more legal ways to come to Europe and allow asylum applications at the land border between Turkey and Greece.

More than 1 million migrants arrived in the EU last year,butthey have not always been welcomed.

Arrests made

Dutch police said Tuesday they arrested three protesters the previous night at a demonstration against a town's plan to build a centrefor asylum-seekers.

Riot police cleared a central square in the town of Heesch after demonstrators began throwing eggs and fireworks at officers. Police say there were no injuries.

The demonstrators were protesting plans, not yet been formally approved, to build a centrefor 500 asylum-seekers in Heesch, a village of some 13,000 inhabitants 100 kilometressoutheast of Amsterdam. Last week, someone hung a pig's carcass from a tree near the proposed location.

Meanwhile, the European Union's top migration official says so-called "hotspots" should be up and running in Greece and Italy within a month in an effort to better control how migrants flow into the bloc and conduct early security checks on them.

The hotspots intended to register new arrivals, take fingerprints and other data, and perform background checks. Those with no chance of asylum would quickly be sent home, while others would be more evenly distributed among EU nations.

Migration Commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos was quoted by Germany's Sueddeutsche Zeitung on Tuesday as saying he sees no immediate end to the flood of asylum seekers and that it's critical to get hotspots running quickly.