Everyday the news headlines tell about the exponentially growing problem of migrants in Europe and about the gravity daily becoming greater than before. The number of migrants today has already exceeded several hundred thousand, and the number of dead has reached at least several thousand. Europe has no solution to this migration crisis and is without any clear strategy, policies, or ideas. Politically, many European countries are having a hard time dealing with this problem. However, when the Turkish government suggested forming a buffer zone in northern Syria that would shelter millions of Syrians in refuges camps and whose airspace would be closed to military aircraft, European countries objected to the idea. If they had tried to participate in Turkey’s suggestions, many Syrian refuges lives could have been saved. However, even this would have been only a short-term solution.
For a long time Italy has been calling for changes to be made in European Council on Refugees and Exile (ECRE)’s regulations from the Dublin Convention, which ruled that asylum applications can only be processed in the country where refugees first set foot on European soil. But the Italian government wants other members of the European Union to come up with some kind of solution because this is not an Italian problem. Refuges are in the EU as soon as they arrive in Italy. The EU policy toward migrants is deporting them, making the asylum laws more difficult, or shutting the borders in some cases, for example, in Hungary that shut its southern border to Serbia and to Bulgaria. According to the EU’s rules, the country in which migrants first arrived is supposed to deal with them, give them a temporary authorization to stay, or grant political asylum. But many immigrants want to travel to Germany and to other countries to find better jobs. Continue reading








