The European Union yesterday (16 May) set a June deadline for Poland and Hungary to start admitting their share of refugees from overstretched Italy and Greece or risk sanctions.

Eastern European countries like Hungary and Poland have opposed an EU plan adopted in 2015 to take in 160,000 Syrian, Eritrean and Iraqi asylum seekers from Greece and Italy.

“I call on Poland and Hungary who have not relocated a single person… to start doing so right now,” EU Migration Commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos told reporters in Strasbourg, France.

Refugee relocations very far from target, Commission admits Member states have relocated only a small fraction of the 160,000 asylum-seekers they committed to absorbing from Greece and Italy, the Commission admitted today (2 February).

“If no action is taken by them before (our) next report in June, the Commission will not hesitate to make use of its powers under the treaties and to open infringement procedures,” he said.

Avramopoulos stated that a total of 18,418 asylum seekers have now been relocated to other EU countries from the two Mediterranean states, saying it was a “last warning” for laggards to do their share.

Polish Prime Minister Beata Szydło was defiant, saying: “I am not afraid of these thundering pronouncements by the Commission.

“We will not agree to the imposition on Poland or any other EU country obligatory quotas.”

Poland Refuses to Take a Single Refugeehttps://t.co/GqvJEqBzJj — Kevin W. (@kwilli1046) May 16, 2017

Under so-called EU “infringement proceedings” Brussels sends a letter to national governments to demand legal explanations over certain issues, before possibly referring them to the European Court of Justice.

Member states can eventually face stiff financial penalties if they fail to comply.

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and other EU officials have long expressed frustration with the slow pace of relocating migrants aimed at helping to tackle the worst European refugee crisis since World War II.

Katainen: For cohesion as well as migration, solidarity is not a one-way street Commission Vice-President Jyrki Katainen reminded the Visegrád countries today (28 March) that the solidarity they expect from the EU’s cohesion policy also applies to the refugee crisis.

More than one million migrants entered Italy and Greece in 2015.

European sources blamed the delays on a series of factors: governments trying to screen jihadists in the wake of terror attacks, a lack of housing and education for asylum seekers, and logistical problems.

They said some countries were setting unacceptable conditions by refusing Muslims, black people or large families, with Eastern European states the worst for discriminating on religious or racial grounds.

Thousands Come Out In Poland To Protest #EU Muslim Refugee Quotas "You Will NOT Bring Your Islam Rules Here" pic.twitter.com/M5KSHwauM6 — Dr. Marty Fox (@DrMartyFox) May 14, 2017

Brussels launched the relocation plan to help people fleeing the mainly Muslim war-torn countries of Syria and Iraq as well as the east African state of Eritrea.

‘Show more flexibility’

Austria, which had asked for a temporary exemption to the scheme, has pledged to relocate 50 people from Italy. The Commission welcomed the move and urged Vienna to do the same from Greece.

The Commission also put pressure on the Czech Republic to resume relocations after having said it failed to take in people for nearly a year.

It also urged Bulgaria and Slovakia to “show more flexibility” on the kinds of people they admit and said Ireland and Estonia should work to clear security concerns with Italy over admitting asylum seekers.

The Commission called on Spain, Belgium, Croatia, Germany, Romania, Slovakia, France and Cyprus to raise the numbers they take in. [More details here.]

Timmermans: Solidarity is key to refugee relocation and resettlement European Commission First Vice-President Frans Timmermans spoke today (8 February) as the executive adopted its ninth progress report on the EU’s emergency refugee relocation and resettlement schemes.