Spain Wants Action
September 21, 2006Meeting with his EU counterparts in Finland, Spanish Justice Minister Juan Fernando Lopez Aguilar said that his country was urging other bloc members to show more solidarity with those states responsible for securing the union's external borders.
"We're not going to stop until the whole of the European Union provides an answer, because an answer is needed," he said, adding that Italy and Malta were also affected.
"We come here, not to ask for help but to push for the proper help that is needed, not only for Spain but for the rest of the European member states which are the southern frontier of the European Union," he said.
When asked what he thought was needed, Lopez Aguilar said: "Money, resources, means, determination and the consciousnesses that this is not a simple contingency, this is a reality which is going to accompany all of us along the way in the first third of the 21st century."
Germany not so happy
The European Commission, the EU's executive body, has been virtually powerless to deal with the problem, apart from providing funds, and has implored the bloc's 25 member countries to show more solidarity.
Politicians in Germany, however, are not pleased with the notion of the EU helping Spain out in dealing with its illegal immigrants.
"I think that's wrong," said Bavaria's Interior Minister Günther Beckstein.
Since the beginning of the year more than 25,000 illegal immigrants, a record number for any one year, have arrived in the Canary Islands off the northwest coast of Africa.
Two boats carrying a total of 172 would-be immigrants arrived on Wednesday.
"Spain won't go under because of that," Beckstein said.
He added that Germany has had to accommodate 448,000 illegal immigrants without EU aid.