Europe Feels Fallout From Merkel Migrant Magnanimity

merkel
TobiasSchwarz/AFP/GettyImages

Angela Merkel may have won praise from the world for Germany’s open-door policy on refugees, but a confused and divided Europe is feeling the fallout from the decision, analysts said.

The German chancellor’s sudden move in early September to welcome asylum seekers from Syria opened bitter rifts in the EU and raised fears for the future of the passport-free Schengen zone.

And while TIME magazine named Merkel as 2015’s person of the year and US President Barack Obama hailed her courage, in Europe she is increasingly being accused of exacerbating the biggest migration crisis since World War II.

With no clear challengers to her role in Germany or in Europe, analysts said Merkel must once again take the lead in guiding Europe towards a lasting solution.

“The German decision bolstered the European Union’s values,” analyst Yves Pascouaud at the European Policy Centre in Brussels, told AFP.

“On the other hand it was a unilateral decision in a shared context.”

Matthieu Tardis, an analyst with the French Institute for International Relations, said Merkel applied international and European law by refusing to turn away refugees fleeing war in Syria.

“Preventing people from coming would have also led to catastrophe,” Tardis told AFP.

“What’s happening in Europe is, before everything else, a crisis for Europe, European institutions, the European project.”

– Unprepared for the surge –

Within the EU, Hungary’s hardline Prime Minister Viktor Orban has railed against Merkel’s “moral imperialism” and eastern European nations have accused Merkel of encouraging migrants to stream though their countries to Germany.

Analysts said Merkel seemed unprepared for the subsequent surge in asylum seekers from Turkey to Greece and then up through the Balkans to Hungary, Austria, Germany and northern Europe.

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