France is ready to take
in 24,000 refugees as part of EU plans to welcome more than 100,000 in the next
two years, French President Francois Hollande said at a news conference on
Monday. Hollande
repeated that he and German leader Angela Merkel wanted the 28-country European
Union to back a plan under which each country would be obliged to take its fair
share of a total of 120,000 migrants.
"This
is a crisis, and it is a grave and dramatic one. It can be brought under
control and it will be," he said
Meanwhile
Reuters also reports European Union member Cyprus said on Monday it would be
willing to take in up to 300 migrants fleeing upheaval in the Middle East under
new EU quotas, but would prefer them to be Christians.
Reuters
report continues:
The
Mediterranean island of about 1 million people is the closest European state to
Syria, which lies about 100 km (60 miles) to its east. But Interior Minister
Socratis Hasikos said its size meant that its reception capacity was limited.
An
EU source said on Monday that the EU executive had drawn up a new set of
national quotas under which member states will take in a total of 160,000
asylum-seekers to be relocated from Italy, Greece and Hungary.
Hasikos,
responsible for migration policy, told state radio: "We have already
stated that 260, a maximum of 300, people can be taken in ... everyone (EU
member states) should pitch in.
"We
would seek for them to be Orthodox Christians ... it's not an issue of being
inhuman or not helping if we are called upon, but to be honest, yes, that's
what we would prefer."
He
said it would be much easier for Christians to adjust to life in Cyprus.
The
island, split in a Turkish invasion in 1974 after a brief Greek inspired coup,
is home to large populations of both Greek Orthodox Christian Greek Cypriots in
the south and Sunni Muslim Turkish Cypriots in the north.
Hasikos
is a minister in Cyprus's internationally recognised government, which effectively
controls only the south, run by Greek Cypriots.
Despite
its proximity to Syria, refugees tend to shun the island because of its
isolation relative to the rest of the EU, and the difficulties of getting out.
It
lies almost 500 km (300 miles) east of the next EU member state, Greece,
primary gateway for migrants entering the bloc via Turkey.
Slovakia and the Czech
Republic have also said they would prefer Christians under any EU resettlement
scheme for migrants fleeing the Middle East.
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