Brussels : European lawmakers are holding a vote on Wednesday on a revamp of the bloc’s migration system that the pro-EU political centre casts as a proof of its viability against the far right ahead of the bloc’s parliamentary election in June.
It promises to cut the times for security and asylum procedures, and increase returns to reduce unwanted immigration from the Middle East and Africa, a high priority on the EU’s agenda.
After eight years of feuds between the bloc’s 27 member states, the compromise proposals lay out a balance between the obligations of arrival countries such as Italy and help from rich destinations such as Germany.
But it has been squarely criticised by anti-immigration, eurosceptic and far-right parties for not going far enough to stop migration, while leftists and rights activists have lambasted it as a major blow to human rights.
The bloc’s top migration official, Home Affairs Commissioner Ylva Johansson, expected majority of European Parliament members to back all the parts of the pact, but said she could not be sure.
Failure to get it through would be a blow for the broad political centre ahead of the continent-wide parliamentary election in two months in which the far right is expected to gain seats.
Migration has been a hot-button issue in the EU since more than a million people – mostly Syrian refugees – arrived across the Mediterranean in 2015, catching the bloc unprepared amid scenes of chaos and suffering.
More than 46,000 people have entered the EU – a wealthy bloc of some 450 million inhabitants – so far this year outside of regular border crossings, according to U.N. data, which also estimates 400 people perished while attempting to get in.
If approved by the parliament, the revamp would be rubber-stamped this month by member states. They would then have two years to implement it, though analysts warn not to expect major changes on the ground overnight.

