Jean-Claude Juncker is seeking a deal with Turkey on migrants issue. Photo: ReutersJean-Claude Juncker is seeking a deal with Turkey on migrants issue. Photo: Reuters

The EU wants more Turkish cooperation with Greece and other EU neighbours to stem migration flows and in return is ready to offer more funding for Syrian and Iraqi refugees in Turkey, according to an EU plan published yesterday.

The draft action plan was presented to President Tayyip Erdogan by European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker on Monday, during a visit to Brussels by the Turkish leader. Officials on both sides said the document would form the basis of further negotiations to address the migrant crisis.

“Erdogan agreed to the principles, which is why today we could make it public,” said one senior EU official involved in the talks. “President Juncker has now sent officials to Ankara to start negotiating the details,” the official said.

EU diplomats said that, while agreement on the plan was only a first step, it was nonetheless a breakthrough, as in the past Erdogan had refused to even discuss the issue of absorbing more migrants from Syria and Iraq.

Erdogan, whose country faces a snap parliamentary election on November 1, was scathing about Europe’s restrained approach to the refugee crisis during rallies in Strasbourg and Brussels before he met European officials on Monday.

But in three back-to-back meetings and at a dinner in Brussels, the mood was said to be far better than the strained meetings of the past, when tensions over Turkey's stalled EU membership bid dominated proceedings.

Facing its worst migrant crisis since the break-up of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, the EU has dropped its criticism of what it sees as Erdogan’s increasing authoritarianism and is looking toTurkey for help.

The draft said the EU would provide up to one billion euros for this year and next to help Turkey cope with some 2.2 million Syrian and Iraqi refugees as well as further funding. Some would have a chance to resettle from Turkey to Europe.

Among actions the EU draft recommended for Turkey were stepping up its coastguard activity and cooperation with the Greek navy as well as tightening its land borders with Greece andBulgaria and taking back irregular migrants who crossed into the EU but were then found not to qualify for asylum.

It contains no mention of Erdogan’s call in Brussels for Europeans to back Ankara’s plan to set up ‘safe areas’ and no-fly zones in northern Syria, on which EU officials and member state governments are sceptical.

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