UN's new refugee agency head says Europe could do more Published duration 24 January 2016 Related Topics Europe migrant crisis

image copyright EPA image caption Filippo Grandi (left) visited Syrian refugees in Lebanon this week

EU states could take more genuine refugees from Syria if they worked together better, the new head of the UN refugee agency has told the BBC.

Italian diplomat Filippo Grandi, who took over the post from Portugal's Antonio Guterres this year, was speaking on a visit to Lebanon.

Mr Grandi also urged the EU to do more for Syrian refugees outside Europe.

EU leaders have warned of a crisis after more than a million migrants entered illegally last year.

On Friday, his Dutch counterpart, Mark Rutte, warned: "When spring comes and the numbers quadruple, we cannot as the EU cope with the numbers any longer."

The new UN High Commissioner for Refugees has been meeting refugees in camps in Lebanon and Jordan.

Speaking to the BBC's Quentin Sommerville, Mr Grandi said: "Europe can absorb more genuine refugees if it would be better organised among the different member-states.

"However, we understand the predicament. It is a social and political predicament which is very serious."

The EU is drawing up plans to share the "burden" of refugees more evenly among member states, scrapping a controversial rule that means they must claim asylum in the first country they arrive in.

Hungary, one of the most vocal critics of migration policy, has dismissed the crisis as a "German problem" since Germany is where those arriving in the EU "would like to go".

Mr Grandi also urged the EU to "do more for the countries of first asylum" so there would be "less motivation for people to flee further away".

Where Europe is failing on migrants