Migrant crisis: More EU states impose border checks Published duration 14 September 2015 Related Topics Europe migrant crisis

media caption Migrants in Vienna who want to head further west are now stranded after Germany imposed border checks, as Bethany Bell reports

More EU countries have said they are imposing border checks to deal with an influx of migrants.

Austria, Slovakia and the Netherlands said they would tighten controls, hours after Germany imposed checks on its border with Austria.

Hungary also completed a fence along its border with Serbia, and blocked a railway line used as a crossing point.

Meanwhile in Brussels, EU interior ministers agreed in principle to relocate 120,000 asylum seekers.

Luxembourg, which holds the EU presidency, said the decision was expected to be made law when ministers meet on 8 October.

There were no details on how the asylum seekers would be shared out among EU states. Some countries have opposed plans for mandatory quotas.

European states have been struggling to cope with a record influx of migrants, many aiming for Germany.

media caption Migrants are being stopped at the Hungary-Serbia border and directed to an official registration point

In Hungary, a container wagon, with one end covered in razor wire, was rolled along the track to plug the gap in the fence near the town of Roszke. Migrants were directed to an official registration point.

Hungary is due to enforce tougher measures from midnight, including arresting illegal immigrants, and Prime Minister Viktor Orban told Hungary's TV2 a state of emergency was "likely" to be introduced in the border area.

The new border checks further north are a challenge to the EU's Schengen agreement on free movement, although the rules do allow for temporary controls in emergencies.

image copyright Reuters image caption Hungary used a container wagon to block a well-used migrant route

media caption The BBC's Chris Morris explains how the Schengen area was created

Austrian police said up to 7,000 people had arrived from Hungary on Monday, and 14,000 on Sunday.

Chancellor Werner Faymann said troops were also being deployed, primarily to provide humanitarian help within Austria, but would be sent to the border if necessary.

"If Germany carries out border controls, Austria must put strengthened border controls in place," Vice-Chancellor Reinhold Mitterlehner said.

media caption Tima Kurdi, the aunt of a Syrian boy whose body was photographed on a Turkish beach, is in Brussels campaigning for refugees

Meanwhile the EU approved a plan for operation in the Mediterranean to conduct "search, seizure and diversion... of vessels suspected of being used for human smuggling".

Most of the migrants who surged into Hungary in recent weeks fled conflict, oppression and poverty in Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and Eritrea.

Many have been refusing to register in Greece or Hungary, fearing it will stop them being granted asylum in Germany or other EU states.

On Monday, Germany's new border controls were said to be causing traffic jams as long as 20km (12 miles) on motorways in Austria.

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The UN refugee agency has warned that refugees could find themselves "in legal limbo".

It said announcements of different border control measures by European states "only underlines the urgency of establishing a comprehensive European response".

media caption How refugee parents explain to children why they have to leave home

German Vice-Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel said border controls were a signal that Germany "cannot accommodate all of the refugees alone".

It expects to receive one million migrants this year, he said, higher than an interior ministry estimate of 800,000.

The UK has said it will take 20,000 people from refugee camps in the region over five years. UK Prime Minister David Cameron visited a refugee camp in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley on Monday.

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