Newsletter Newsletters Events Events Podcasts Videos Africanews
Loader
Advertisement

Austria may lift veto preventing Romania and Bulgaria joining Schengen

Austria's Interior Minister Gerhard Kraner, speaks to media during statements with Romanian counterpart Lucian Bode in Bucharest.
Austria's Interior Minister Gerhard Kraner, speaks to media during statements with Romanian counterpart Lucian Bode in Bucharest. Copyright  AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda
Copyright AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda
By Abby Chitty with EBU
Published on
Share this article Comments
Share this article Close Button
Copy/paste the article video embed link below: Copy to clipboard Copied

Austria's Interior Minister has hinted that Austria could lift its veto on full Schengen area membership for Romania and Bulgaria after improvements in border protection.

ADVERTISEMENT

It follows calls from Austria's designated EU Commissioner for Migration, Magnus Brunner, for both countries to become full members.

For the past two years Austria has been blocking the full admission of Romania and Bulgaria into the Schengen area which guarantees the free movement of people and goods inside the Europe Union.

The argument at the time was that too many refugees were reaching Austria via the Western Balkans route. In the previous year, the rules were then relaxed somewhat and free entry and exit by air and sea was made possible.

The situation has since improved further, according to the Ministry of the Interior.

Speaking at a hearing in the EU parliament, Karner said: "We can now see that the numbers of illegal migration via these countries in particular have fallen massively. This means that we are on the right path, but have not yet reached the end of the road."

He added that Austria had been able to achieve significant improvements in border protection and returns as a result of the veto, but the aim was to push illegal migration towards zero.

Romania MEP Victor Negrescu recently announced that Romania is on the 'final stretch' towards Schengen membership, outlining three possible scenarios: a decision made this year, a longer-term negotiation with the new European Commission and possibly delays as a result of the political situation in Bulgaria.

Romania Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu meets Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni in Rome.
Romania Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu meets Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni in Rome. Roberto Monaldo/LaPresse

Meanwhile, Romania's Prime Minister, Marcel Ciolacu, has said he believes Romania could fully enter the Schengen area by spring 2025, with a decision made before the second round of presidential elections on 8 December.

Ciolacu indicated that the process could be finalised by December, with implementation set to begin in March next year. This change would enable Romanians to cross EU land borders without checks by Easter 2025.

The talks on Schengen enlargement are making "good progress", as Austria's designated EU Commissioner for Migration, Magnus Brunner, recently reported at his hearing in the EU Parliament. An agreement therefore seems to be in sight.

The breakthrough could come at a meeting with both countries in Hungary on 22 November.

Go to accessibility shortcuts
Share this article Comments

Read more

Is the border-free Schengen Area about to unravel?

Romania is now in the Schengen Zone. Here’s why you should visit this year

How military business could be the game changer for the EU-India free trade deal