Brussels---The European Commission is due Wednesday to unveil its latest version of a controversial plan to force EU member states to more evenly absorb the wave of migrants making the dangerous crossing of the Mediterranean to Europe.
UN chief Ban Ki-moon was also due in Brussels after urging Europe to do more to help migrants and after the EU has sought UN Security Council approval to launch a naval operation against migrant smugglers.
The commission, the executive of the 28-nation EU, will ask member states to share the burden of admitting tens of thousands of asylum seekers who land in Italy, Greece and Malta.
"The proposal is not perfect, but it amounts to an enormous step forward, because it introduces the principle of solidarity," EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said Tuesday.
"We will have to build a consensus" around the relocation proposal for asylum seekers "so that interior ministers can approve it" by a simple majority when they meet June 16 in Luxembourg, she added.
The task is bound to be particularly difficult because Britain, Hungary, the Baltic states, the Czech Republic and Poland oppose mandatory relocation based on a redistribution "key" system.
The proposal presented Wednesday by EU Home Affairs Commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos suggests migrants be distributed according to four criteria: gross national product, population, unemployment and the number of asylum requests already registered in the country.
The relocation plan is to allow for the transfer to other states of people eligible for international protection. It opens a breach in the Dublin rules that require the country where asylum seekers first land to take them in.
The measure aims to respond to an "emergency," according to the commission, which fears the arrival of a wave of migrants and asylum seekers during the summer in Italy, Malta and Greece.
- Naval mission against traffickers -
Around half a million migrants could attempt to cross the Mediterranean, the UN International Maritime Organization warned in late April.
But the effort to share the burden is due to be limited in time and concerns only new arrivals from the month of July.
EU sources said only a little more than 40,000 people, mainly asylum seekers from Syria and Eritrea, would be redistributed around member states.
"There was never a question of retroactivity," an EU source said.
Italy alone will be left to deal with the 80,000 migrants and asylum seekers who have landed on its shores and are housed in centres.
AFP