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EU interior ministers to discuss mass protection for Ukraine refugees

European Union (EU) interior ministers are to meet on Thursday to seek political agreement on a European Commission proposal to offer mass protection to refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine.

“All those fleeing Putin’s bombs are welcome in Europe,” Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a press conference announcing the move.

Ylva Johansson EU Home Affairs Commissioner first announced the proposal at a crisis meeting of EU interior ministers on Sunday, three days after Russian President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine.

The proposal is a temporary directive to allow refugees from Ukraine to apply for protected status in any EU member state.

The protection status is to remain valid for one year but could be extended further for two years depending on a decision from the EU member states.

The directive also allows for controls on EU member states to be relaxed to make evacuations easier.

Technical work could move forward “very quickly” on the proposal to allow EU member states to use the measures if EU interior ministers reach an agreement, an EU diplomat said.

 

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The directive was designed in the aftermath of the breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s but was never used.

Russia’s invasion is estimated to have displaced more than 870,000 people from Ukraine, with the majority of refugees, more than 450,000, in Poland, according to UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency.

Other EU member states hosting large numbers of refugees are Hungary, Slovakia, and Romania.

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