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The influx of refugees into Slovenia is “absolutely unbearable,” Prime Minister Miro Cerar said, warning that the surge in migrants risked tearing apart the European Union.

Slovenia “has received more than 60,000 migrants in the last 10 days, 13,000 in one day,” Cerar said at a meeting on Sunday in Brussels to seek ways to deal with the increasing flow of refugees through the Western Balkans. The government last week called on the army to help control the situation at its border.

“If we do not deliver some immediate and concrete actions on the ground in the next few days and weeks, I do believe that the European Union and Europe as a whole will start falling apart,” Cerar said.

Ten European Union and three non-EU countries took part in the talks in Brussels, which agreed on a 17-point plan to try to address the refugee crisis. The plan includes deployment to Slovenia “within a week of 400 police officers and essential equipment through bilateral support,” the participants said in a statement after the gathering.

More than 75,500 migrants have entered Slovenia since Oct. 17, the police said on its website on Monday.

Slovenia on Wednesday gave its army extra powers to help police border posts. The decision came after Hungary closed its frontier with their mutual neighbor Croatia and altered the route of tens of thousands of migrants. Croatia said bottlenecks were occurring because Slovenia was taking too long to register migrants who originally entered the EU via Greece.

Cerar said before the Brussels meeting that Croatia should communicate better with Slovenia about where refugees are being sent. “I expect Croatia not to send people to Slovenia deliberately in a dispersed way without sending us notices where we can expect them,” he said.

The Slovenian leader pushed for Sunday’s meeting to “bring about some concrete, immediate action plan.” The agreed plan “should be delivered in the next few days or weeks,” Cerar said.

The EU has pledged 54 million euros ($59.6 million) through 2020 to help the nation tackle the refugee crisis, which Interior Minister Vesna Gyorkos estimated costs about 770,000 euros a day.