Czech Republic no longer considered transit country by illegal migrants
The Czech Republic is no longer considered a transit country by illegal migrants. Statistics released by the Czech Foreign Police earlier this week, suggest that the number of people attempting to cross the borders into Germany and Austria illegally has decreased, while the number of foreigners staying in the country without residence permits is on the rise. Dita Asiedu has more:
Some migrants may have made the Czech Republic their target destination in the hopes of gaining easy access to the West upon the country's entry to the European Union. But the head of the foreign and border police, Jindrich Urban, says it will be a few years before that will be possible. Border crossings will stay in place and passport controls will continue along the borders with Austria and Germany as the Czech Republic is yet to meet a number of conditions to be able to sign the Schengen Agreement - a treaty signed by several European states (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Finland, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain and Sweden), making it possible to travel between them without any border controls at all. Jindrich Urban:
"We are going to enter the so-called transition period when we join the EU, during which we try to meet the conditions of those chapters in the Schengen Agreement that are directly concerned with EU membership. When that is achieved, we'll start working on the factors necessary to become a Schengen state. We will also be linked to the Schengen data base. When the Czech government approved the Schengen Action Plan, it pledged to be prepared to join the Schengen Agreement by December 31, 2005. That is when the situation on the borders will change dramatically, as we'll stop protecting the green border area and will no longer continue with the border checks on border crossings with Schengen countries."