Europe disgraced itself on refugee quotas: German vice-chancellor

German Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel talking with refugees in Wolgast, northeastern Germany on Sept 14, 2015 PHOTO: AFP

BERLIN (AFP) - German Vice-Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel said on Tuesday (Sept 15) that Europe "disgraced itself" when EU ministers failed to reach agreement on a quota plan to share the refugee burden.

"Europe once again disgraced itself yesterday," Gabriel said a day after EU ministers failed to reach unanimous agreement on a plan to take 120,000 refugees.

EU countries needed to understand that "the whole of Europe is at stake", he said, adding that "what we are experiencing now threatens Europe far more than the Greece crisis".

"Our country can't solve the refugee problems of half the world by itself," said Gabriel, who on Monday predicted Germany will receive as many as one million asylum seekers this year, up from the official forecast of 800,000.

Hopes of a unanimous deal on distributing 120,000 refugees from overstretched Greece, Italy and Hungary across the bloc collapsed Monday in the face of opposition from Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Romania.

The crisis meeting of interior ministers in Brussels did formally agree however to launch a plan first proposed in May to relocate another 40,000 asylum seekers from Greece and Italy over the next two years.

Gabriel said that given the flood of refugees into Europe "160,000 places is a drop in the ocean", referring to the total number of people the bloc was debating taking.

He also suggested that EU aid funds be used to exert pressure on member states to accept binding quotas of refugees.

"Germany is not ready to be a net payer country in a Europe where everyone wants to join in when they get money, but are not willing to share the responsibility," he said.

Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere had earlier also said EU funds could be used to pressure members that are net beneficiaries but are refusing to accept their fair share of migrants.

"The negotiations situation is such that nothing happens to countries which refuse," he said.

"We need to talk about ways of exerting pressure. These are often countries that receive a lot of structural funds from the European Union." He recalled that European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker "has suggested that we should look at whether these countries should get less structural funds, which I agree with." Germany, facing a surge in migrant numbers, took the drastic step of reinstating border controls on Sunday.

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