Ten Years of Migration Crisis: The Fracture that Changed Europe
4 Articles
4 Articles
Ten years on: How Europe’s 2015 migration wave redefined societies
A decade after more than a million people arrived in Europe, the legacy of the 2015 migration surge is visible in politics, classrooms, workplaces and communities. Though for EU Migration Commissioner Magnus Brunner, sovereign control over migration policy and cooperation with third countries are key to halt a further influx of asylum seekers.
"We need control over what is happening in Europe. That has been missing for the last ten years," says Austria's EU Migration Commissioner Magnus Brunner (ÖVP) in the APA interview in Brussels. In 2015, Europe had taken responsibility for millions of refugees, but "without control or rules". The topic of migration "burns everyone's fingers", which he felt from the beginning of his term of office. However, he does not want a "fortress Europe".
Ten years ago, Austria also opened the borders for tens of thousands of migrants. While politicians were sunning themselves in welcome euphoria, no registration was given.A decision that changed the country.This post focus on the border opening 2015 When Austria waved tens of thousands of migrants to Germany was published on JUNGE FREIHEIT.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 100% of the sources lean Right
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium