Moroccan Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita said he rejects the European Union's plan to build asylum centers in North Africa, according to an interview with German national daily Die Welt.

The EU wants to reach migration deals with Middle East and northern African countries, such as Morocco, Egypt, Tunisia, and Libya, similar to the one it has with Turkey, and has suggested building migrant "reception centers" in these countries to hold asylum seekers.

Read more: Morocco: A risky migration partner for the EU

What Bourita said:

"Morocco is generally opposed to all kinds of centers. That is part of our migration policy and a national sovereign position … [it is] too easy to say that this is a Moroccan issue."

"Migration comprises three percent of the world's population, 80 percent of which is legal … So we are only talking about 20 percent of these three per cent."

"Are we real partners or just a neighbor you're afraid of?" questioning Europe's attitude towards Morocco.

"The EU can't ask Morocco to help with migration and the fight against terrorism and treat the country like an object."

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The EU's asylum center plan: The EU wants to make agreements with Middle East and northern African countries similar to the one it made with Turkey in 2016. The EU has raised the possibility of building migrant reception centers to hold asylum seekers in some of these countries. Under the 2016 EU-Turkey migration deal, Ankara agreed to prevent migrants from crossing to Greece and take some migrants back, in exchange for several billion euros in financial aid to assist with some 3.5 million refugees.

Read more: EU: Africa refugee centers won't be like Guantanamo Bay

What progress has been made: There have been no formal agreements made yet. So far Morocco, Albania, Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria and Egypt have said they are not interested in participating. European Council President Donald Tusk has said EU leaders have agreed to a summit with Arab states in February, which would likely address migration, trade and economic development.

"Ultimately, we'll need agreements and accords that are structured like the agreement between the European Union and Turkey," German Chancellor Angela Merkel said in September, recognizing that the situation of every country would require a different solution.

Why the EU wants the migrant centers: Under the 2015 Dublin Regulation, the member state an asylum seeker enters the EU in is also the state they must be processed in. Italy is the busiest gateway for migrants arriving in Europe via the Mediterranean, which has resulted in it taking the brunt of asylum seekers. The reception centers are part a broader plan to more evenly distribute asylum seekers in Europe.

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law/aw (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)