Luxembourg - The European Union should open its doors to
Iraqi refugees, especially Christians, Germany's Interior Minister
Wolfgang Schaeuble said at a meeting with EU counterparts in
Luxembourg on Friday.
In a volte-face from Germany's position one year ago, when it
rejected a similar call from Sweden, Schaeuble called on the EU's
member states to share the burden of looking after Iraqi refugees - a
burden which is at present unevenly spread across the bloc.
And while he refused to propose the number of refugees that
Germany would accept, saying that any mention of a concrete figure
would hijack the debate, he insisted that the EU should give priority
to religious minorities, above all Christians.
'There is an almost 99-per-cent match between 'religious
minorities' and 'Christians',' he told journalists after the meeting.
Schaeuble's comments came just hours after senior German officials
called on the EU's member states to take in proportionate numbers of
the refugees.
Joerg Schoenbohm, interior minister of Brandenburg state, said
after consultations among the 16 German states near Berlin that the
invitation must be a joint EU project, not a German one. The refugees
must be distributed to all the EU nations, he said.
'The EU nations must commit themselves to jointly accept the
refugees, so that it isn't Germany all by itself that takes in the
mass of the refugees, as happened with Yugoslavia,' said Schoenbohm.
He was referring to the tens of thousands of Bosnians who took
refuge in Germany from the Bosnian war in the mid-1990s.
Another centre-right minister, Volker Bouffier of Hesse, said,
'Back then, Germany took in more people than all the other European
nations combined.'
On Sunday, Schaeuble spoke out in favour of taking in a large
contingent of the hundreds of thousands of Iraqi Christians who have
fled to refugee camps in Syria and Jordan.
But critics said that the plan to specifically help the minority,
which has lived in Iraq since before Islam and mainly speaks the
Aramaic language, would implicitly discriminate against Muslims.
The current head of the European Union's council of interior
ministers gave a cold response earlier Friday to the German proposal.
'In general, I believe we must accept refugees and give asylum to
everybody, without preconditions of religion or if anybody is from
another race,' Slovenian Interior Minister Dragutin Mate said.
Luxembourg Integration Minister Nicolas Schmit also reacted
without enthusiasm to the proposal, saying that it would not be
possible to be 'selective.'
However, EU states should show 'solidarity' on the broader issue
of Iraqi refugees, he said. Non-governmental organizations including
Amnesty International have accused most EU member states of not doing
enough to help Iraqi refugees.
Ahead of the meeting, Amnesty's general secretary, Irene Khan,
told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa that Germany should take in other
Iraqi refugees as well, not just Christian ones.
The Christians from Iraq complain that intimidation, murder and
abductions of Christians have continued, even as violence between
Arabic-speaking Sunni and Shiite Muslim factions has declined.
The Catholic and Lutheran churches have pressed for Germany, which
opposed the US invasion of Iraq, to take in 20,000 to 30,000.
German Foreign Ministry data suggests an original Iraqi Christian
population of 800,000 had halved by 2005 to 400,000.
Iraq's two main native Christian denominations are the independent
Church of the East under Patriarch Dinkha IV, and the Chaldean
Catholic Church under patriarch Emmanuel III Delly which is linked to
Catholicism.
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