Thursday 21 April 2016
Justus Lipsius building - Brussels
11.00
Arrival of the President of Indonesia Joko Widodo
Welcome by the President of the European Council Donald Tusk
(VIP entrance, level 02 - photo/TV opportunity)
Access to the VIP entrance (level 02) for the photo opportunity will be granted to all journalists holding an EU Council 6-month badge.
Journalists without the above badge must send a request by e-mail to press.centre@consilium.europa.eu - deadline Tuesday 19 April at 18.00.
One year after, we look back on how the EU migration crisis unfolded through 2015, and how the EU developed its response. This is the "inside story", as told by key witnesses from the Council of the EU and the European Commission. It is an attempt to explain the complexities of one of the biggest crises the EU is experiencing. It covers 9 months of crisis in 2015, and is available in 24 EU languages.
This is Monday’s edition of our daily Brussels Briefing. To receive it every morning in your email in-box, sign up here.
Pope Francis meets with refugees on the Greek island of Lesbos during a visit on Saturday
Which European country has received the most asylum seekers on a per capita basis so far this year? Germany? No. Sweden? No. Hungary? No. After this weekend, it is actually the Vatican. Aided by a low official population of 450, the Vatican shot to the top of the leaderboard when it comes to housing refugees after Pope Francis returned from his trip to Lesbos with 12 Syrians in tow.
The gesture was token and humanitarian rather than political — or so the Vatican’s spinners insisted. But it provided an ugly juxtaposition for German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who spent the weekend fending off criticism at home after giving the go ahead for a criminal investigation into a comedian who made jokes at the expense of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
The footage of a pope embracing asylum seekers who fled war only to face months of detention in Greece and then a legally questionable return across the Aegean provided the grimmest reminder yet of the moral price that the EU has paid for the Merkel-led deal with Turkey.
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