Hungary plans to construct a large border fence to keep migrants from crossing into the country from Serbia.

Ministers have called for plans for a four-meter-high structure to be submitted by next week. The decision follows a large rise in the number of people applying for asylum in Hungary.

So far this year, more than 53,000 people have claimed refuge, up by more than 20 percent in a year and far higher than the 2,000 requests in 2012.

Officials predict the number will reach 130,000 by the end of the year.

Ministers impatient

Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto defended the measures, saying: "This decision does not break any international treaty, other countries have opted for the same solution."

Szijjarto recognized that immigration was a serious problem for all EU countries but that Hungary could not "afford to wait any longer".

Budapest has faced accusations of xenophobia in its response to the refugee crisis.

Many of the migrants are Kosovo Albanians, escaping poverty in their own country and taking advantage of a lifting of travel restrictions last summer.

Able to travel through Serbia on buses, reports say they head straight for a stretch of the 175-kilometer border with Hungary and, once inside the Schengen visa zone, they are free to travel through the rest of Europe.

Listen to audio 01:47 Share Hungary migrants lost in translation Send Facebook google+ Whatsapp Tumblr linkedin stumble Digg reddit Newsvine Permalink https://p.dw.com/p/1Ffjl Hungary plans posters to deter illegal migrants.

Bound for Germany

Many more migrants end up in Germany. Earlier this year, Berlin sent its own patrols to the Hungary-Serbia border to assist local border staff.

Germany says it rejects more than 99 percent of asylum applications from Kosovans, as candidates must show they would face persecution if they returned to their home country.

Berlin is preparing a law change to make it easier to deport failed asylum seekers from Kosovo by making it a country of safe origin.

mm/rc (dpa, AFP, Reuters)