BERLIN • Chancellor Angela Merkel won accolades for her stunning call on Sept 4, 2015, to keep open Germany's doors to hundreds of thousands of asylum seekers, many fleeing war-torn Syria or Iraq.

Three years on, scenes of far-right protesters chasing down foreigners in a German city have shocked the world.

All of Europe has seen a sea-change since the migration crisis erupted: Britain is just months away from quitting the European Union, the far-right is sharing power in Italy and Austria, and the extremist Alternative for Germany has become the biggest opposition party in Germany's Parliament.

If there is a common denominator for these upheavals in European politics, it is the migration crisis seized upon by pro-Brexiters and far-right forces across Europe as the public enemy in their campaigns.

Despite her "we can do it" rally cry, Dr Merkel has now agreed to toughen rules to curb new arrivals, while the EU as a bloc is seeking to stop migrants landing on its soil. As a result, the influx has dwindled.

In Germany, which recorded 745,545 asylum applications in 2016, just 93,316 were registered for the first half of this year.

Some headway also appears to have been made on integration.

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One in four asylum seekers who arrived in Germany since 2015 has since found work, according to data released in May by the Employment Ministry's think-tank IAB. Nevertheless, "migration remains the biggest challenge" for the bloc, noted visiting professor Stefan Lehne at Carnegie Europe.

"While the numbers of arrivals are down, the hysteria is up, as populist movements and a growing number of mainstream politicians are building their business model on anti-migration sentiments."

In the most recent illustration of the deep-seated resentment against newcomers, hundreds of mostly white men gathered swiftly in the eastern German city of Chemnitz, some attacking foreign-looking people, after news circulated that a German man was stabbed to death last Sunday, allegedly by an Iraqi and a Syrian.

Across the Atlantic, US President Donald Trump in June also poured fuel on the burning topic, tweeting: "Big mistake made all over Europe in allowing millions of people in who have so strongly and violently changed their culture!"

Some analysts warn that not only is Europe's migration crisis not over, it could yet be the undoing of the EU itself. Offering a pessimistic reading of the situation, British historian Niall Ferguson wrote: "Far from leading to a fusion, Europe's migration crisis is leading to fission."

The professor at Harvard added: "Increasingly, I believe that the issue of migration will be seen by future historians as the fatal solvent of the EU... In their accounts Brexit will appear as merely an early symptom of the crisis."

EU member states' reaction to the refugee influx has been dramatically different to that of the financial crisis, which was marked by countries sacrificing controls over the banking system to save the euro, Professor Lehne noted.

"The response to the recent refugee crisis was just the opposite," he said, with countries turning instead to national measures.

"This logic of re-nationalisation, combined with the rise of xenophobia and identity politics in many EU countries, now hampers the development of robust collective instruments to deal with migration challenges," he said.

Italy's far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini has repeatedly accused Europe of abandoning his country. Ahead of next year's European Parliament elections, the hardline minister has also aligned himself with the right-wing "Visegrad" countries of the Czech Republic, Poland, Austria and Hungary to form an anti-migration camp.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE