
Human rights activists and lawyers have condemned police in the Czech Republic for writing numbers on the arms of migrants after detaining them.

Officers used pens to mark 214 refugees, mostly Syrians, who were detained on a train yesterday at a border crossing from Austria and Hungary.

The measure has provoked anger because it recalls Nazi Germany's practice of writing numbers on concentration camp prisoners.

The controversy came as thousands of desperate migrants staged angry protests outside Budapest’s main international railway station today after Hungarian authorities refused to let them board trains bound for Western Europe.

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'There is no law allowing this': A Czech police officer uses a marker pen to write a number on a migrant child after detaining more than 200 refugees, mostly from Syria, on trains from Hungary and Austria at the railway station in Breclav

Chilling echo of the past: Human rights activists and lawyers today condemned the practise because it recalls Nazi Germany's practice of writing numbers on concentration camp prisoners

Alp Mehmet, vice-chairman of MigrationWatch, which campaigns for managed migration, told MailOnline: 'It is simply wrong and foolish.

'They are treating them in a way that could look like they are branding them or doing what happened to the Jews in Nazi Germany.

'I can understand why people will be repulsed by this type of action. No one is suggesting they won't be treated well, but the sooner they stop this the better all around.'

Andrew Stroehlein, European Media Director of Human Rights Watch, tweeted a picture of an officer marking a migrant child and later wrote: 'What never stops amazing me are people who look at the Holocaust and think that it only holds lessons for Germans & Jews.'

Zuzana Candigliota, a lawyer with the Czech Human Rights League, added: 'There is no law allowing the police to mark people like this.'

Czech interior ministry spokeswoman Lucie Novakova said the move was introduced because of the increasing number of children among the refugees.

'Our goal is to prevent the children from getting lost,' she added.

The measure was used with large groups of refugees to keep record of family members, according to Katerina Rendlova, spokeswoman for a unit of the Czech police dealing with foreigners.

'We also write the code of the train they have arrived on so that we know which country we should return them to within the readmission system.'

Unlike some other EU member states, Czech authorities maintain that migrants who enter the country without first having made an asylum request should be returned to the state from which they arrived, in line with the EU's Dublin Provision.

Around 3,000 migrants are currently waiting at Keleti station in the capital, many camping outside the main entrance guarded by police, who said citizen patrols were assisting them in keeping order

Hungary’s police said in a statement they intend to reinforce their positions outside the terminal as the volume of migrants arriving from Serbia continues to grow by the hour

Loud chants of 'freedom, freedom' filled the streets outside the station, as several hundred migrants engaged in tense stand-offs with police

Many of those in the expanding crowd have made placards containing pleading messages, including this one which says: 'Help Europe'

Scores of migrant families have taken cover in the underground passage near to the station as they wait to find out their fate

Fury is growing among the crowd as they wait for the station to be reopened. Unlike some other EU states, Czech authorities maintain that migrants who enter the country without having made an asylum request should be returned to the state from which they arrived

The overwhelming majority of Czechs oppose hosting refugees, according to an August survey by local polling agency Focus in which 93 percent of respondents said they should be returned to their country of origin.

Rendlova said the refugees 'used to get the numbers on a piece of paper but they kept throwing them away'.

'They have agreed with the marking – they don't have a problem with this, they know it's in their interest.'

But rights activists and lawyers cite legal and ethical concerns.

'I guess they agree because they believe the police officer has the right to do this,' said Candigliota.

Prague lawyer Marek Dufek added: 'I know it's difficult because the refugees have no documents.'

Blocked: Loud chants of 'freedom, freedom' filled the streets outside the station, as migrants engaged in tense stand-offs with police

A young Syrian girl holds up a sign as migrants protest outside Keleti station in central Budapest which remains closed to them

Making demands: Syrian and Afghan refugees shout political slogans and demand to be allowed to travel on to Germany

Stand off: Hungarian police officers face migrants outside Keleti railway station in eastern Budapest earlier this morning

But he questioned whether they had agreed to the markings: 'Do they have a signed approval form in their native tongue?'

Meanwhile, around 3,000 migrants are currently waiting at Keleti station in the Hungarian capital, many camping outside the main entrance guarded by police, who said citizen patrols were assisting them in keeping order.

Outside the station, young Syrian children were wrapped in blankets and held in the air as if they were dead to remind Hungarian authorities of the bloody warzones hundreds of those now stranded in Budapest had risked their lives to flee in recent weeks.

All trains out of Keleti station remain cancelled after it was overwhelmed with desperate migrants trying to reach western Europe yesterday. Loud chants of 'freedom, freedom' filled the streets outside the station, as several hundred migrants engaged in tense stand-offs with police.

Frustration: Protesting migrants from Afghanistan and Syria hold up a child wrapped in blankets, as a reminder of the horrors they have fled, while demonstrating outside the shuttered Keleti Railway Station in Budapest earlier this morning

Symbolic: Migrants hold up young boys covered in blankets in front of the Keleti Railway Station in Budapest this morning. The gesture is intended to remind Hungarian authorities of the death and destruction the migrants have already fled

Migrants protest outside Keleti railway station in Budapest this morning. Hundreds of migrants protested in front of Budapest's Eastern railway station today shouting 'freedom, freedom' and demanding to be let onto trains bound for Germany

Migrants push each other in front of the Keleti railway station in Budapest as hundreds demanded to be let on trains to Germany

Volunteer groups accustomed to providing food, clothing and medical assistance to a few hundred migrants at a time struggled with the large number of people staying in every corner of the station’s sunken plaza.

More than 150,000 migrants have reached Hungary this year, most coming through the southern border with Serbia. Many apply for asylum but quickly try to leave for richer EU countries.

Hungary’s police said in a statement they intend to reinforce their positions outside the terminal as the volume of migrants arriving from Serbia continues to grow by the hour.

They said officers working jointly with colleagues from Austria, Germany and Slovakia also were searching for migrants travelling illegally on other Hungarian trains and described the security push as compatible with the EU’s policy of passport-free travel.

Efforts to control, curtail and protect migrants continued unabated elsewhere across Europe. French authorities said services on the cross-Channel Eurostar trains were returning to normal after serious overnight disruptions triggered by reports of migrants running on the tracks and trying to climb on top of trains.

Passengers aboard one Paris-to-London train said their service was suspended because migrants trying to climb aboard the train damaged fire safety equipment.

In tweets, passengers also described seeing migrants running along the roofs of another train near the migrant-besieged French port of Calais.

Low spirits: A family of desperate migrants are seen resting near the Keleti Railway Station in Budapest earlier this morning

A young girl sleeps on a bench as migrants rest near the Keleti Railway Station. Her family have been stopped from leaving the country

A group of migrants chanting 'freedom, freedom' make their way through the crowd to Keleti railway terminus in Budapest this morning

Yesterday all trains out of Keleti station were cancelled after it was overwhelmed with desperate migrants trying to reach western Europe

Pushing: Volunteer groups accustomed to providing food, clothing and medical assistance dealt with a few hundred migrants at a time

Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orban, is scheduled to meet EU chiefs on Thursday to discuss his country’s handling of its unprecedented flow this year of more than 150,000 migrants, chiefly from Syria and other conflict zones. While Germany said it expects to receive 800,000 migrants this year, quadruple last year’s figure, many EU members face criticism for failing to commit to housing more asylum seekers.

In non-EU member Iceland, a populist movement is challenging the government’s pledge to host just 50 Syrians.

The newly launched Syria’s Calling pressure group said thousands of island residents had gone online over the past 48 hours to commit to opening their homes to a war refugee. Others called on Iceland to open a disused army base for migrant housing.

Naval vessels from several nations continued to patrol Mediterranean waters off the coast of Libya in hopes of preventing more mass drownings of migrants. A Norwegian vessel said it was carrying about 800 rescued migrants, including 11 pregnant women and more than 30 children, to Cagliari on Italy’s island of Sardinia.

Despite the crisis at Keleti station, Hungary's government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs complained that his country has been made the 'scapegoat' of Europe's migrant crisis, in an interview with BBC Newsnight.

'There's no time to try to find a scapegoat, which is why we reject that Hungary is being pointed out as a scapegoat in this whole story,' he said during the interview.

'What we are really hoping for, since the beginning of this year, is to have a completely renewed approach to migration and refugee system.

'The system that was designed years ago has completely failed, it's falling apart. It is not able to handle these numbers.'

Pleading for help: Migrants shout slogans in front of the Keleti Railway Station in Budapest earlier this morning

Hundreds of migrants protested in front of Budapest's Keleti Railway Station for a second straight day, shouting 'Freedom, freedom!'

No support: A young migrant boy holds up a sign that claims the Hungarian police officers took his money and passport

Force: A group of migrants try to make their way through the crowd to the Keleti Railway Terminus in Budapest this morning

A sign is displayed on a German registered car to ward-off migrants who might try to force the French occupants to drive them to Germany

What we are really hoping for is to have a completely renewed approach to migration. The system that was designed years ago has completely failed, it's falling apart. It is not able to handle these numbers. Hungary government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs

Mr Kovacs protested that Hungary is only trying to comply with the law of the Schengen zone, which he said has 'very strict rules for movement within the free movement zone'.

Hungarian railway authorities yesterday said they would allow 'only those in possession of the appropriate travel documents and - if necessary - a visa' to board trains travelling to western Europe.

In a statement posted on their website, the Hungarian police said they would 'continue to carry out [their] duties in accordance with the Schengen rules on border control'.

But concerns have been raised that the harsh conditions will force vulnerable refugees into the hands of people-traffickers.

When they were asked yesterday what the country's policy on allowing to be to travel today, Kovacs admitted that they don't have any other choice but to stick to the EU's Schengen rules.

'They simply don't have the right to [board trains],' he continued.

'There are strict rules. Hungary's border with Serbia is not simply the two countries' border but also the Schengen border.'

The spokesman continued that with 'no protocols in place', the system is collapsing 'in front of our eyes'.

He revealed that the situation as it is being portrayed in the media is just one section of the real problem, and that the country is struggling to cope with the 156,000 people who have crossed its borders, many heading to Austria, Germany and Scandinavian countries.

Sleeping: Hungary’s police said in a statement they intend to reinforce their positions outside the terminal as the volume of migrants arriving from Serbia continues to grow by the hour

Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orban, is scheduled to meet EU chiefs on Thursday to discuss his country’s handling of its unprecedented flow this year of more than 150,000 migrants

Nowhere to go: Thousands of men, women and children slept in sleeping bags outside the city's Eastern Railway Terminus overnight

All trains were cancelled out of the city's Keleti station after it was overwhelmed with desperate migrants trying to reach western Europe

Hungary has become a key stage in the route from the Middle East and Africa to western Europe, and is currently buckling under the weight of 3,000 people a day crossing through its green borders.

August alone has seen 50,000 people arrive in the country.

The spokesman called on all EU member states to follow Hungary's lead in protecting its borders.

'Step up in a very strict manner to keep these people out of the European borders up until their identities are established,' he demanded.

'Up until it has been established whether they are in real need of asylum.'

He added: 'If everybody was doing their homework and complying to the existing rules, everything would be completely different.'

Hungarian authorities decided to evacuate and close the city's Eastern Railway Terminus when scuffles broke out between people storming their way onto carriages on Tuesday morning.

Thousands of migrants remain stranded at Budapest's main international railway station as authorities stick to European Union rules and prevent them from leaving for Germany and other countries west of Hungary

Hungarian policemen talk to some of hundreds of migrants waiting near the Keleti Railway Station in Budapest earlier this morning

Desperate: Volunteer groups accustomed to providing food, clothing and medical assistance to a few hundred migrants at a time

Around 3,000 migrants are at Keleti station in the Hungarian capital, many camping outside the main entrance guarded by police, who said citizen patrols were assisting them in keeping order

Thousands were allowed to board trains to Germany and Austria just the day before, leading to the highest number of migrants entering Austria in a single day this year, with police saying 3,650 arrived in Vienna by train on Monday.

But yet hundreds more arrived - after crawling under razorwire and making treacherous sea crossings - only to be told they were 24 hours too late.

Hungary has been taking an increasingly militant stance against migration at its borders, hastily constructing a razorwire fence along its border with Serbia, and warning that up to 3,500 soldiers could be sent to support border security.

We cannot give shelter to the economic migrants, we cannot bear that burden, so they will be returned where they come from. Hungarian foreign minister Peter Szijjarto

The Hungarian government was heavily criticised on Monday when it allowed thousands to travel to northern Europe. Critics insisted the country had broken EU restrictions, which require migrants to apply for asylum in the first EU nation they enter.

France slammed the country's border fence as 'scandalous' while Austria accused Hungary of being 'sloppy' in applying the Dublin rules. The Hungarian government has summoned the ambassadors of both countries to explain the remarks.

Hungarian foreign minister Peter Szijjarto said: 'We cannot give shelter to the economic migrants, we cannot bear that burden, so they will be returned where they come from.'

In complete contrast to the situation in Hungary, police in Munich said they had been 'overwhelmed' by donations of food, clothing, medicine and water, even appealing for the gifts to stop.

The ongoing crisis in Budapest came just hours after German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the EU's passport-free travel zone was under threat.

Spain's Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said that the migrant crisis is Europe's 'greatest challenge', during Tuesday's talks with the German Chancellor.

A young man sleeps on a window ledge as migrants rest near the Keleti Railway Station in Budapest earlier this morning

Hungary's government spokesman has revealed that 3,000 migrants and refugees are entering his country every day, just hours after furious clashes with police at a train station in Budapest

Thousands of people are sleeping on the streets outside Budapest's Eastern Railway Terminus tonight, after Hungary closed the station to migrants on Tuesday

Entire families are camping out at the station, waiting to see whether the situation will change tomorrow and they will be allowed to continue with their journeys to western Europe

Britain was warned yesterday that a refusal to take in more refugees could do serious damage to Prime Minister David Cameron's plans to renegotiates the country's relationship with the European Union.

Stephan Mayer, spokesman for Angela Merkel's CDU/CSU alliance, said Britain's insistence that it is 'out of the club' in sharing the refugee burden could harm Mr Cameron's ambitions to win back powers from Brussels.

Germany has said it expects to accept 800,000 asylum seekers this year whereas Britain received 25,771 asylum applications in the year ending June 2015, according to the Home Office.

Meanwhile, migrants clambered through razorwire fences into Macedonia, risked their lives on rubber dinghies in the Mediterranean Sea, and one man even hid inside a red-hot car engine in a bid to get out of Morocco as the migrant crisis continued to spiral out of control.

A further 49 Syrian refugees were rescued by Turkish fishermen in the Aegean Sea, while Austrian police rescued 24 Afghans aged just 16 and 17, from a truck which was described as a 'prison cell on wheels'.

About 100 police officers wearing helmets and wielding batons guarded the station as people booed and hissed outside. One man held up a sign that said, in German: 'Please let us go!'

The station reopened yesterday afternoon but only non-migrants were allowed in. Police were checking tickets, ID cards and relevant visas.

Fights broke out earlier in the morning among some of the migrants as they were blocked from getting on a train scheduled to leave for Vienna and Munich.

Fights broke out earlier in the morning among some of the migrants as they were blocked from getting on a train scheduled to leave for Vienna and Munich

But Hungary has insisted that it has no other choice if it is to comply with the 'strict rules' that govern movement within the Schengen zone

Violence broke out as tensions ran high at the station today, after migrants and refugees were told that no one else would be allowed to board trains

The situation has calmed down at the station for tonight, although police are still standing guard, with families sleeping out in the open on steps outside the station and in nearby streets

Several hundred of the migrants at the station demonstrated following the closure, and loud chants of 'Germany, Germany' and 'Merkel, Merkel' filled the streets outside the station

But government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs complained tonight that Hungary has been made the 'scapegoat' of Europe's migrant crisis, in an interview with BBC Newsnight

Several say they spent hundreds of euros on tickets after police told them they would be allowed free passage.

Hassan, a 47-year-old Syrian, said he and two friends had each bought tickets to Germany for a total of 375 euros.

'They took 125 euros for each ticket to Munich or Berlin, then they stopped and forced us from the station,' he said.

Marah, a 20-year-old woman from Aleppo, Syria, who travelled with her family, said they had bought six tickets for a RailJet train that was scheduled to leave for Vienna at 9am yesterday.

'They should find a solution,' she said. 'We are thousands here, where should we go?'

When asked why the station was closed, government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs said Hungary was trying to enforce EU law, which requires anyone who wishes to travel within Europe to hold a valid passport and a Schengen visa.

Hungarian and Austrian authorities allowed trainloads of undocumented migrants to reach Germany on Monday. Czech police said they had detained 214 mostly Syrian migrants headed for Germany on overnight trains from Vienna and Budapest.

Austrian police, which has been on high alert for people-smugglers since 71 migrants were found dead in a lorry last week, said 24 young Afghans were rescued from a 'prison cell on wheels'.

Further protests and fighting is expected tomorrow, when the migrant families are once again told that they will not be allowed to board trains to continue their journeys

The spokesman revealed that the situation as it is being portrayed in the media is just one section of the real problem, and that the country is struggling to cope with the 156,000 people who have crossed its borders, many heading to Austria, Germany and Scandinavian countries

Chaos: Migrants wave their train tickets and lift up their children in the air outside the station in Budapest, Hungary, during an protest

Crowds: In total, 1,000 migrants are still at the Budapest railway station hoping to leave Hungary and board trains to Austria and Germany

Hundreds of migrants staged protests outside the Budapest station demanding they be allowed to board trains to Germany and Austria

Migrants pictured scrambling to get on a train at the main railway station in Salzburg, Austria to continue their journeys to Germany

MIGRANT IS FOUND HIDDEN IN SPECIALLY-MADE COMPARTMENT NEXT TO A CAR'S ENGINE BY SPANISH OFFICIALS Curled in the foetal position next to a car engine, this migrant was lucky to be alive after going to desperate lengths to try to smuggle himself into Europe. The asylum seeker, thought to be from Guinea, West Africa, was found in a special compartment under the car bonnet as it crossed into the Spanish enclave of Ceuta from Morocco. A man was found crammed into a compartment next to the engine of a car trying to cross into the Spanish enclave of Ceuta Guardia Civil border police discovered him crammed between the engine block and radiator after noticing that the driver of the car appeared nervous. He was taken to hospital suffering from the effects of the intense heat and fumes and doctors said he could have died if he had been there much longer. Advertisement

The people, mostly aged around 16 or 17, were crammed inside a van like objects.

A police spokesman said they were 'crammed on top of each other into a very small space'.

They added: 'The windows and side doors had been welded shut, a grill had been welded to the inside of the windows which were sprayed in black paint. A locking bolt had also been attached to the doors on the outside. It was like a prison cell on wheels.'

Austrian police have stepped up checks on trucks and vans after the dead bodies of 71 migrants were found in the back of an abandoned truck on an Austrian motorway last Thursday.

Many of the 50,000 migrants who entered Hungary in August alone hope to travel onwards to countries in western Europe like Germany and Sweden, which invariably means transiting through Austria.

The Romanian driver in the latest incident fled after police pulled over the vehicle in Vienna. He was later apprehended with help of a police dog called Iceman. The 24 Afghans needed no medical treatment.

A further 49 Syrian migrants were rescued by Turkish fisherman last night, after they found themselves adrift in the Aegean Sea.

The desperate men, women and children were trying to make the hazardous crossing to reach Greece, but were so exhausted most needed help to cross from their dilapidated boat to the rescue boat.

Violence: Scuffles had broken out earlier in the morning among some of the migrants as they were blocked from getting on a train

Evacuation: Migrants come face-to-face with police after being told to leave the station in Budapest, Hungary on Tuesday morning

Leaving: A woman and her two children were among 1,000 migrants ordered to leave the city's Eastern Railway Terminus in Hungary

Clashes: Migrants and police pictured at the railway station in Budapest, Hungary, after people were told to leave and it was closed

Families could be seen carrying their belongings from the train station after they were told to leave on Tuesday morning and it was closed

A migrant holds his head in his hands as the train station in Budapest is closed following earlier scuffles as migrants tried to board trains

A Turkish fishing boat rescues 49 Syrian refugees who were trying to reach Greece in the Aegean Sea in Izmir, western Turkey last night

Fishermen from Izmir sail from the fishing port to the Aegean Sea with the start of the fishing season, but cam across the stranded people

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban will discuss the migration crisis with EU leaders in Brussels on Thursday, the government's website quoted his press chief Bertalan Havasi as saying yesterday.

Orban will meet with EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, European Council Chairman Donald Tusk and European Parliament President Martin Schulz, as well as Joseph Daul, the chairman of the European People's Party.

Havasi added that leaders of the Visegrad Four countries - Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary - will hold an extraordinary summit in Prague on Friday.

Hungary's Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto told reporters yesterday that all migrants that come to the country will be registered and economic migrants will be sent back to the state from which they entered.

He also said Hungary, which has been struggling with a large influx of migrants in recent months, did not support the quota system for distribution, saying such a system only encourages migrants and smugglers.

'We plan to register all migrants regardless of the fact that we are not the first member state they enter. We will register everyone who submits the request for asylum and carry out the procedure,' Szijjarto said.

'If the decision is positive the refugee can stay, but if it is not positive we cannot give shelter to the economic migrants, we cannot bear that burden, so they will be returned where they come from.'

The 49 people on board including men, women and children, all fleeing poverty and starvation in their war-torn homeland of Syria

Those on board were already exhausted from their long journey from Syria, and needed to be helped from their boat onto the rescue boat

The nearly 50 refugees had found themselves stranded in the middle of the Aegean, while making the hazardous crossing to Greece

Europe is buckling under the weight of thousands of migrants and refugees arriving from war-torn nations in the Middle East and Africa

While many attempt to cross into Europe by water, crammed into dilapidated fishing boats, thousands more are forcing through land borders

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban will discuss the migration crisis with EU leaders in Brussels on Thursday, the government's website quoted his press chief Bertalan Havasi as saying yesterday

'HOW MANY MILLIONS DOES EUROPE WANT TO TAKE?' FARAGE SAYS CHECKS AT BORDERS SHOULD BE TIGHTENED UKIP leader Nigel Farage says Britain should follow Austria's lead UKIP leader Nigel Farage said Britain should follow Austria's lead in tightening up checks at borders to prevent illegal immigrants entering the country. He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: 'The EU have sent a message that anybody who comes across the Mediterranean or comes through Turkey, once they have set foot in an EU country they will be accepted. 'That's sent a message to hundreds of thousands of people that they can come.' 'Genuine' refugees had historically tended to be members of ethnic or religious groups fleeing for their lives, said Mr Farage. But he added: 'The problem we have now is if you look at the definition of the EU's asylum policy, it includes anybody who comes from a war-torn country and it even includes people leaving extreme poverty. 'The problem we've got is potentially we've opened the door to an exodus of biblical proportions, meaning millions and millions of people. We've lost sight of what is a genuine refugee. How many millions does Europe want to take? That really is the question.' Britain should offer refugee status to 'a few thousand people' from Syria but cannot provide an open door to migrants, he said. 'I think we are going to have to start doing what the Austrians did yesterday,' Mr Farage added. 'The Austrians stopped lorries and stopped cars and checked and found 200 people who were smuggled trying to come into their country. 'We are going to have to accept that crossing borders is going to get more difficult if we are serious about dealing with illegal immigration.' Advertisement

A total of 3,650 migrants reached Vienna by train on Monday, this year's biggest daily number, Austrian police said.

'Allowing them to simply board in Budapest... and watching as they are taken to the neighbour (Austria) - that's not politics,' Austrian chancellor Werner Faymann said.

Many of the migrants slept at Vienna's Westbahnhof station, hoping to continue their journey on to Germany, which last week eased asylum restrictions for Syrian refugees.

Austrian authorities said they were overwhelmed and police admitted they did not have the manpower to carry out effective controls, which would normally include sending migrants without proper travel documents back to Hungary.

Trouble at the train stations was matched by delays on the highways as Austrian authorities re-imposed border controls at main crossings from Hungary.

On Monday, Mrs Merkel said if Europe was not able to agree on how to share out the responsibility for refugees, the Schengen area of 26 European countries that have removed border checks between each other would be under threat.

Many of the 50,000 migrants who entered Hungary in August alone hope to travel onwards to countries in western Europe like Germany and Sweden, which invariably means transiting through Austria

The EU executive is set to outline new plans next week to distribute refugees across European states, as well as the speed up the deportation of unwanted migrants

Crowds: Hundreds of migrants waited to board trains at Keleti rail station in Budapest, Hungary before the station was closed yesterday

The Hungarian city's main international station was evacuated after hundreds of migrants tried to board trains to Austria and Germany

A migrant boy sits on his father's shoulders as they wait to board a train at Keleti Railway Station, Budapest before it closed on Tuesday

The Schengen Agreement was signed by Belgium, France, German, Luxembourg and the Netherlands in June 1985, and created a passport-free travel zone. All 26 European countries that are part of the area have removed checkpoints between each other, creating a single external border

SLOVAK PRIME MINISTER REJECTS EU QUOTAS FOR REDISTRIBUTING MIGRANTS DESPITE MERKEL'S WARNING Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico said he will reject EU quotas Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico has said he will reject any EU quotas for redistributing immigrants, adding 'we will wake up one day and have 100,000 people from the Arab world'. Slovakia and the Czech Republic hope to forge a common position with Hungary and Poland on Europe's migrant crisis that would reject any EU quotas, the two countries' leaders said on Monday. Czech Prime Minister Bohuslav Sobotka has invited his counterparts in the so-called Visegrad 4 group to discuss the crisis in Prague on Friday, a spokesman said. The outcome is likely to be a hardline stance on the issue that the EU's central European states will take to an extraordinary meeting of EU interior ministers on September 14. Hungary's status as an eastern outpost of Europe's passport-free Schengen area has made it a transit route for tens of thousands of migrants from the Middle East and beyond heading for western Europe via the Balkans. The central Europeans have blocked proposals from Brussels that envisage EU member states accepting binding quotas to share out asylum-seekers crossing the Mediterranean to Italy and Greece. Since then, voluntary offers by member states to take in immigrants have fallen short of the needed numbers. French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius has called their stance 'scandalous'. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the future of Schengen would be in question if Europe cannot agree on redistributing refugees. 'We strongly reject any quotas ... If a mechanism for automatic redistribution of migrants is adopted, then we will wake up one day and have 100,000 people from the Arab world and that is a problem I would not like Slovakia to have,' Fico told a news conference shown live on television. 'We are prepared to do what is needed and what is within our possibilities, for people who really need help, separate them from economic migrants,' he added. Czech President Milos Zeman said the country should reject quotas and increase its border protection, given the EU was unable to do so. 'The Czech Republic should take care of its borders on its own, it should expel illegal migrants ... even using the army, should it be needed,' Zeman said. Advertisement

WHAT IS THE SCHENGEN AGREEMENT? Germany Chancellor Angela Merkel said the EU's passport-free travel zone is under threat The Schengen Agreement was signed by Belgium, France, German, Luxembourg and the Netherlands in June 1985, and created a passport-free travel zone.

All 26 European countries that are part of the area have removed checkpoints between each other, creating a single external border.

The present-day zone covers all the EU member states – except the UK, Ireland, Cyprus, Bulgaria, Romania and Croatia – as well as Iceland, Norway, Switzerland and Liechtenstein, which are all outside the EU.

It is named after the town in Luxembourg where it was signed. Advertisement

She became the latest leader to raise concerns that hundreds of thousands of migrants crossing the Mediterranean to Italy and Greece are able to travel freely to other areas – such as Calais – because there are no borders.

She said: 'If we don't succeed in fairly distributing refugees then of course the Schengen question will be on the agenda for many.'

Under the rules people are able to travel freely between most of the countries on mainland Europe without having their passports checked.

But it means refugees entering Europe in Italy and Greece are travelling north and west before they claim asylum instead of making their applications in the first EU country they enter, as they are supposed to.

Germany has become a top destination for those fleeing Syria after it last week agreed to waive the so-called Dublin regulations that mean people can claim only in the first country they get to.

It has said it expects roughly 800,000 people to seek asylum there this year, nearly four times as many as last year and far more than any other EU country.

The European Commission has said the Schengen Agreement is 'non-negotiable'. A spokesman last night added: 'Schengen is not the problem.'

The EU executive is set to outline new plans next week to distribute refugees across European states, as well as the speed up the deportation of unwanted migrants.

Dimitris Avramopoulos, the EU migration commissioner, made the announcement yesterday, saying that the new scheme could involve detaining those rejected until they return home.

European governments are straining to balance obligations to provide refuge with hostility among the public to mass immigration.

The Commission will put new proposals to interior ministers at an emergency meeting on September 14.

The emergency meeting will come five days after Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker is expected to outline plans to the European Parliament during his annual state of the Union address on Wednesday.

Desperate refugees lift a child across the border between Macedonia and Greece, near the town of Gevgelija earlier today

A terrified young boy carrying his possessions on his backpack is pulled back by officers as he tries to cross the border with his mother

A Macedonian policeman carries a tiny child across the border, as thousands of refugees line up in an attempt to reach safety

Desperate: A mother falls to her knees and begs police officers to allow her to enter Macedonia from northern Greece yesterday

Border: A woman and a young boy pictured entering Macedonia near Gevgelija after crossing the border with Greece yesterday morning

Line-up: Migrants have been trekking from the southern Macedonian border (pictured) near Gevgelija to the northern border with Serbia

A man pushes a friend in a wheelchair after crossing from Greece to Macedonia yesterday. There have been protests at the border

Crossing: A child pictured sleeping soundly as she is carried across the border into Macedonia from Greece yesterday morning

The EU has ramped up its plans in response to a massive surge in arrivals over the summer, while member states argue over how to spread the load.

Avramopoulos added that his discussions with governments gave him hope they would end objections to a distribution system for asylum-seekers that Juncker put forward in May and will next week present as a permanent EU mechanism.

'The majority of countries…want to contribute,' he said.

'Some countries that were a bit reluctant…have changed their mind because now they realise that this problem is not the problem of other countries but theirs as well.'

Iceland is considering allowing more people escaping the conflict in Syria to seek refuge in the country, after four per cent of the population joined a Facebook page calling for it.

Around 12,000 people from a population of little over 300,000 joined the social network page.

Syrian migrants climb down a steep embankment to a railroad track that will lead them to a crossing on the Greek-Macedonian border

A baby cries as he is held by a man walking down a steep track towards the Macedonian border where their papers will be processed

A Syrian migrant carries his daughter as he walks to a railroad track in Idomeni that will lead the group to the Greece-Macedonia border

A line of migrants clutch onto a cable for stability as they climb down a dangerously steep embankmet to a line of railroad tracks

Syrian migrants lined up to buy food from a food stall as hundreds of families wait to cross the border into Macedonia on train tracks

The migrants gather together outside the vendor's stall near Idomeni, Greece, as they preapred to use the so-called Balkans route

The government had earlier announced plans to take in 50 refugees from the Syrian conflict. That small number prompted Icelanders to sign up to the page which aimed to show the government there was public will to do more.

Prime Minister Sigmund David Gunnlaugsson now says a special council comprised of several ministers will map Iceland's resources to see how many refugees could be taken and said the government now had no fixed number.

Yesterday, the Italian Navy rescued 118 people from a rubber dinghy in the Mediterranean Sea off the Libyan coast.

And in Greece on Monday, police fired a stun grenade at migrants protesting on the border with Macedonia and there were warnings that the tiny holiday island of Lesbos was being 'overwhelmed' by more than 13,000 migrants and refugees.

In Greece, the humanitarian relief organisation the International Rescue Committee has warned of the intense strain on the island of Lesbos.

On Saturday alone, 4,000 refugees and migrants arrived from the nearby coast of Turkey and there were further arrivals on Sunday and Monday.

A man carries a young child into Hungary at the Serbian border as the national right-wing party Jobbik demonstrate against refugees

A Macedonian border patrol leader (left) speaks with his Greek counterpart as they coordinate the timing of allowing a group of 50 Syrian migrants to cross into Macedonia

Syrian migrants make a list of the people travelling in their group as they wait at a border crossing on the Greek-Macedonian border

Syrian refugees walk across railways tracks next to the Serbian town of Horgos in the hope of crossing the border and entering Hungary

On their way: Over 150,000 migrants have reached Hungary this year, most coming through the southern border with Serbia

A Hungarian police officer looks from his binoculars as he checks the border searching for refugees entering the country illegally

Officers look on as a group of migrants, including children, women and families, arrive in Roszke village, southern Hungary

Migrants arrive in Hungary at sundown having crossed the Serbian border near Roszke, southern Hungary

A family walks hand-in-hand alongside the railway line in Idomeni. Migrants arriving there will hope to travel north through Macedonia

A boy balances along the tracks at the Greek-Macedonian border in Idomeni, Greece, where thousands are expected to arrive tomorrow

Two passenger ships transporting more than 4,200 desperate migrants arrive on the Greek mainland after leaving the crisis-hit island of Lesbos

Two ships carrying more than 4,200 migrants from an eastern Greek island to the port of Piraeus arrived late last night, the Greek coastguard said.

Greece has seen a spike in the number of refugees and migrants arriving on the islands by rubber dinghies via nearby Turkey this summer, with aid agencies estimating about 2,000 crossing over daily last month.

After a hiatus of a few days last week, Greek authorities on Saturday resumed carrying the refugees - mostly from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan - to the mainland by ship from the islands of Kos, Lesbos, Samos, Symi and Agathonissi.

Many then carry on their journeys across mainland Europe.

Arrival:The chaotic scenes in Budapest come as two passenger ships transporting more than 4,200 desperate migrants arrived on the Greek mainland overnight after leaving the crisis-hit island of Lesbos

Refugees and migrants disembark from the passenger ship 'Tera Jet' following their trip from the island of Lesbos to the port of Piraeus

A coastguard official said that another ship with 2,459 migrants is expected to arrive from the island in the early hours of this morning

New life: Refugees and migrants are seen on a bus following their arrival from the island of Lesbos to the port of Piraeus late last night

'You have to help us,' said 27-year-old Isham, a Syrian teacher who left his wife and two children behind in Turkey.

'We are human,' he said, appealing to governments not to block the refugees' attempts to travel through Europe in search of a better life.

A coastguard official said the ship, the Tera Jet, carrying 1,749 migrants from Lesbos docked in Piraeus adding that another ship with 2,459 migrants was expected to arrive from the island in the early hours of this morning.

An average of 1,700 migrants crossed into Greece daily in July, with the number topping 2,000 a day in August.

Cash-strapped Greece has said it lacked the infrastructure to cope with influx.

President Prokopis Pavlopoulos told French counterpart Francois Hollande by telephone that migration should be addressed at a top European level, according to a statement by Pavlopoulos' office.

Greece's caretaker Prime Minister Vassiliki Thanou will chair a ministerial meeting on migration today. Thanou took over last week after former Greek premier Alexis Tsipras, who heads the leftist Syriza party, resigned last month to pave the way for a snap election on Sept. 20.

Refugees and migrants carry their belongings while boarding the passenger ship 'Tera Jet' heading to the port of Piraeus yesterday

An average of 1,700 migrants crossed into Greece daily in July, with the number topping 2,000 a day in August

Refugees line up at the port on the island of Lesbos to board the passenger ship 'Tera Jet', which too them to the mainland port of Piraeus