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Slovakian village votes 'no' to asylum seekers

August 3, 2015

A village in Slovakia has strongly rejected Hosting asylum seekers to ease pressure on overcrowded shelters in neighboring Austria. The plan, approved by the interior ministers of both countries, was put to a local vote.

https://p.dw.com/p/1G8k5
June 20, 2015 Slovakian people take part in a protest against immigrants in Bratislava, Slovakia, June 20, 2015.
This protest against immigration was held in Bratislava on June 20Image: picture-alliance/Xinhua/A. Klizan

In a referendum held on Sunday in the Slovak town of Gabcikovo, almost 97 percent of those who voted said "No" to temporarily taking in 500 asylum seekers.

Officials in Gabcikovo, just south of the capital Bratislava, organized the referendum after more than 3,000 residents signed a petition opposing plans to shelter the asylum seekers temporarily in a university building in the town.

Some 2,600 of the town's 4,300 eligible voters took part, a turnout of 58.5 percent. Only 102 voted in favor of accepting the asylum seekers. The vote in opposition was overwhelming - 96.67 percent.

Agreement between neighbors

The interior ministers of both Slovakia and Austria had agreed in July that Vienna could send up to 500 people who had applied for asylum in Austria to Slovakia by the end of September. Slovak Interior Minister Robert Kalinak and his Austrian counterpart, Johanna Mikl-Leitner, had arranged that the asylum applications would still be processed in Austria and Vienna would cover personnel costs, but Slovakia would take on the accommodation costs.

Austrian authorities were seeking to relieve pressure on the overcrowded refugee arrival center in Traiskirchen, just south of Vienna, where in July some 1,200 people had to sleep outside because of a lack of space.

Slowakei/ Österreich/ Flüchtlinge
The interior ministers of Slovakia and Austria agreed in July to send 500 asylum seekers to SlovakiaImage: picture-alliance/APA/H. Pfarrhofer

Sunday's referendum isn't binding for Slovak authorities, but it will now be clear to them that sending the asylum seekers to Gabcikovo is against the wishes of most of the town's population.

The issue of how to cope with the hundreds of thousands of people now seeking refuge in Europe - many fleeing conflict or poverty in the Middle East, Africa and some eastern European nations - is seen as a test for European solidarity.

Slovakia is not a favored destination for asylum seekers, with only 14 people granted asylum there last year. The country's Prime Minister Robert Fico has threatened a referendum if European Commission plans for a quota system to distribute refugees more evenly throughout the European Union are implemented.

Austria, which has a population of about 8.5 million, has reported 70,000 asylum seekers arriving in this year alone, compared with 28,000 last year. Authorities are struggling to cope with all the new arrivals.

se/gsw (AFP, dpa)