Merkel was said to have made her comments during a meeting with her conservative allies in Bavaria.
Members of the CSU, the Bavarian sister party to Merkel’s Chrstian Democrats, said she had criticized the decision by Vienna to limit the number of people allowed to claim asylum there this year.
Austrian authorities want to limit the number to less than half of the 90,000 claiming asylum in the country in 2015.
Two participants who attended
the discussions in Kreuth
near Munich told journalists Merkel had said Austria’s move was “not helpful,” in context of discussions with Turkey on limiting the numbers entering Europe as a whole.
The level of discord
was said to be greater than at a previous meeting of CSU members two weeks ago, when Merkel was present. “The disagreement has not got any smaller,” said one of those who had been present.
Disappointment in Bavaria
The CSU’s leader Horst Seehofer said he did not believe Merkel would be successful in her efforts to reduce the number of refugees at a European level. The chancellor has long opposed a limit of asylum numbers, preferring to broker a European Union-wide solution with the support of Turkey, through which most migrants travel from the Middle East.
“Today was disappointing,” Seehofer told German public broadcaster ARD. “There was no trace of a concession. Tough politics await us in the next weeks and months.”
Chancellor Werner Faymann, meeting with leaders from across the nation in Vienna, announced on Wednesday that
the number of asylum claim would be restricted
to 1.5 percent of Austria’s population, with that spread over the next four years.
Austria is also considering
much stricter border controls
in an attempt to limit the influx of refugees.
‘We will study what happens’
“We can’t take all asylum seekers here in Austria,” said Faymann after the meeting, adding that the government was only prepared to take in “about 130,000” more refugees through 2019. In the coming year, Austria will only accept 37,500 asylum claims.
“We have fixed this number as a guideline… We will study what happens when this limit is reached,” the chancellor said.
Faymann said that the cap would serve as a “wake up call for the EU” in an “emergency situation” the bloc isn’t addressing properly.
rc/bw (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)