Maghreb-European Summit to Set Up Task Force on Immigration
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةNorth African and European leaders will set up an immigration task force following the Arab Spring uprisings, which have seen a sharp rise in people making risky boat crossings to seek a new life in Europe.
The decision was announced at a summit in Malta which brought together the leaders of five European countries (France, Italy, Malta, Portugal, Spain) and five Maghreb states (Algeria, Libya, Morocco, Mauritania, Tunisia).
"The democratic urgency is immigration," Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki said, adding that members had agreed to set up "a task force to prevent these migrations and help people in order to avoid tragedies at sea".
The "Malta Declaration" released at the end of the summit stressed that the illegal immigration "cannot be managed purely through control measures" such as border checks or repatriation of those who manage to get across to Europe.
"It also demands concerted action to tackle the fundamental causes of migration along with the development of an efficient, quick and tangible solidarity" between the countries concerned, it added.
"There are Tunisian, Libyan children, sometimes very young kids who die in shipwrecks. Each shipwreck is a catastrophe... and cannot be accepted," Marzouki told journalists at the press conference closing the talks.
He called on the summit's members to "pool efforts and resources," but said it "must not be a security operation, but a humanitarian one.
"We cannot accept that hundreds of people are dying in the Mediterranean."
Each year, thousands of illegal migrants, mostly from Africa, attempt the crossing of the Mediterranean in often overcrowded and unseaworthy vessels in a bid to reach the European Union and hundreds are lost at sea in shipwrecks.
The summit was the first held by the so-called "Five Plus Five" forum since the Arab Spring revolts, which greatly changed the Maghreb's political make-up.
"The events in North Africa are historic and they have consequences for every other country," Maltese Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi said at the start of the summit, calling for a future of "collective prosperity" for the region.
Issues on the table ranged from security in the region to cooperation deals to boost the economy and infrastructure on the Mediterranean's southern shore.
Marzouki, who came to power in Tunisia last year after long-time ruler Zine El Abidine Ben Ali fled and the country held its first democratic vote, earlier said that the region's transitions "are not a threat for Europe."
He reassured the European leaders that "non-democratic Islamic systems would not be accepted by people. We want Islamic democracy, not autocracy."
He also said that there were "lots of opportunities" for European investment, adding that the region was "in bad need" of infrastructure.
It was the second summit for the forum, which was launched in Rome in 1990, after a first round of talks was held in Tunis in 2003.