Don't miss

Replay


LATEST SHOWS

MEDIAWATCH

Twitter bans Alex Jones for life

Read more

EYE ON AFRICA

Doctors Without Borders calls for migrants evacuations from Libya

Read more

THE WORLD THIS WEEK

Brazil elctoral campaign turmoil, Inside Trump's White House, Swedish elections and Europe's Greens

Read more

FRANCE IN FOCUS

The search for France's second-hand treasures

Read more

ENCORE!

Capturing the Rohingya crisis: Paula Bronstein’s photographs of a tragic human flux

Read more

#TECH 24

'Silicon Allee': Berlin's vibrant tech sector

Read more

FOCUS

Anti-immigration sentiment fuels far-right Sweden Democrats party

Read more

#THE 51%

The Right Pitch: Why women's voices are deepening

Read more

REPORTERS

Video: The North Korean gamble

Read more

Supreme Court orders Spain to take in more refugees

© AFP/File | People hold a banner reading "We don't want refugees" during a demonstration called by the far-right political party Espana 2000 against the arrival of the Aquarius rescue ship in Valencia on June 16, 2018

MADRID (AFP) - 

Spain's Supreme Court has ordered Madrid to take in more refugees after ruling it had not honoured its EU commitment to accept least 16,000 asylum-seekers from Italy and Greece, it announced Wednesday.

"More than six months after the deadline expired, a report by (Spain's) Office for asylum and refugees recognises that the current track record with respect to its final obligations is below 13 percent," the court said in a ruling dated July 9 but released on Wednesday.

As a result, Spain must "continue the procedure" to take in refugees, the court added, but stopped short of fining the government.

In September 2015, at the height of the migrant crisis in Europe, EU member states reached a deal to share out 160,000 asylum-seekers who had arrived in Italy and Greece within two years, to ease the pressure on both countries.

Spain had pledged to take in at least 16,000 migrants.

Like Spain, most countries have not met their commitment and many migrants have left Italy and Greece of their own volition rather than wait to be transferred.

Since then, more and more migrants crossing the Mediterranean have chosen to head for Spain rather than Italy or Greece.

With 15,426 arrivals so far this year, according to the International Organization for Migration, Spain has already overtaken Greece and is set to catch up with Italy.

© 2018 AFP