The Latest: Finland warns of natives vs. immigrants tensions

SID, Serbia (AP) — The latest as tens of thousands of people flood into Europe in search of a new life. All times local.

6:40 p.m.

Europol says 29 suspects have been arrested during raids in Spain and Poland that targeted a Pakistani crime gang accused of smuggling Pakistanis into Europe and putting them to work under slave-like conditions in kebab restaurants.

The European Union police agency announced Tuesday that 365 Spanish and Polish police officers launched raids Oct. 24 and 25 at dozens of restaurants and homes, making arrests and seizing evidence, including equipment to forge travel documents.

An anti-smuggling team at Europol’s headquarters in The Hague helped coordinate the operation.

Europol says migrants paid the gang around 14,000 euros ($15,300) for the trip to Europe, often crossing the Mediterranean in unseaworthy boats from Turkey to Greece or Libya to Italy.

It was not immediately clear how many migrants the gang smuggled in.

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5:20 p.m.

Finland’s interior minister says increasing tensions between ethnic Finns and asylum-seekers is the biggest security threat facing the Nordic country.

Petteri Orpo warned Tuesday of a “growing risk” of violent attacks against asylum-seekers and among asylum-seekers, saying some have been refused refuge because of their participation in terror-linked organizations.

Security police chief Antti Pelttari says the threat of a terror attack is still “low” in the country of 5.5 million but that the agency has a watch-list of 300 people with suspected sympathies toward extreme Islamist ideology.

There have been several anti-immigrant protests in Finland and police have reported a few minor attacks or threats against asylum centers. No one has been hurt.

Immigration officials estimate that some 35,000 migrants will have arrived in the country by year-end — a tenfold increase on 2014.

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5:00 p.m.

Hungary’s parliament has approved a resolution that rejects the European Union’s plan to introduce a quota system to share refugees among member nations.

The approval Tuesday by lawmakers from Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s Fidesz party, its Christian Democrat coalition partners and the far-right Jobbik party paves the way for the government to launch legal action against the EU to avoid having to take part in the scheme.

The government said earlier it would wait for parliament to weigh in on the issue before deciding on a possible lawsuit. Neighboring Slovakia is considering similar steps.

Hungary grants asylum to a few hundred refugees a year and rejects economic migrants. It has built fences on its borders with Serbia and Croatia which has diverted migrants toward Slovenia in their efforts to reach Germany and other, richer EU countries.

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3:50 p.m.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and her most prominent domestic critic of recent weeks have put on a show of unity, appearing together to stress their joint aim to pare back the migrant influx.

Horst Seehofer, Bavaria’s governor and leader of the Bavarian branch of Merkel’s conservative bloc, has publicly criticized Merkel’s welcoming approach to refugees for weeks, demanding federal government action.

But Merkel and the Christian Social Union leader buried the hatchet in recent days and are pressing their partners in Germany’s governing coalition, the center-left Social Democrats, to agree to new measures.

During a joint appearance with Seehofer before a meeting of lawmakers Tuesday, Merkel said the conservatives want to “order and steer the refugee flow, fight the causes of flight and so reduce the number of refugees.”

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1 p.m.

Germany’s vice chancellor is denouncing as “silly” an argument within Chancellor Angela Merkel’s governing coalition over whether to set up “transit zones” to weed out near the country’s borders migrants with no realistic asylum claim.

Merkel’s conservative bloc is pushing hard for the idea, details of which remain unclear, but Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel’s Social Democrats have opposed it. They argue the plan would effectively entail interning large numbers of people and be impractical.

Gabriel said Tuesday that an influx of people from Balkan countries considered safe has largely dried up and it’s “relatively silly” to argue over something that would be useful for a tiny proportion of migrants.

He said officials should instead discuss questions such as how to dissuade people from countries such as Afghanistan and Pakistan from coming.

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12:50 p.m.

Slovakia is sending a unit of 20 police officers to Slovenia to help the tiny Alpine nation protect the external border of Europe’s visa-free Schengen zone amid a migrant influx.

Tuesday’s announcement by Prime Minister Robert Fico comes a day after another EU member, the Czech Republic, made the same decision.

Fico says the officers might travel to Slovenia as soon as Friday.

Slovakian Interior Minister Robert Kalinak also says his country is forming a new unit of 300 police officers who will be ready to be deployed to other EU nations to help protect the EU’s outer borders.

Slovakia already sent 50 police officers to help Hungary.

Slovenia has said its ability to deal with the influx has been stretched to the limit with thousands of migrants crossing its territory in hopes of reaching Western Europe.

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12:35 p.m.

The secretary general of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies says the sheer scale of the refugee influx to Europe has overwhelmed authorities, and acknowledged more must be done.

During a visit on Tuesday to Greece, the country that has borne the brunt of new arrivals, Elhadj As Sy said the refugee numbers hadn’t been predicted. IFRC figures Tuesday show 600,000 people reached Greece so far this year.

“What we are facing is much more than what was expected,” As Sy said after meeting Greek migration minister Yiannis Mouzalas. “And that’s why everybody is overwhelmed.”

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12:25 p.m.

Chancellor Angela Merkel says that Europe’s refugee crisis won’t be solved at the German-Austrian border and is warning other countries that they shouldn’t assume they won’t be affected.

Merkel renewed her call on Tuesday for a fair distribution of refugees around Europe. Germany has taken by far the most refugees so far, with Sweden and Austria also receiving many, but several other European Union countries have been reluctant to make any significant contribution.

Merkel, who faces pressure at home to reduce the influx, said: “I am firmly convinced that we will not manage this challenge at the German-Austrian border.” She added: “Those in Europe who think today that they are not affected by this will be affected in some way tomorrow, if only through the unity of Europe being questioned.”

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12:20 p.m.

An official says recently-arrived migrants housed at a British army base on Cyprus had set fire to two tents, but that the blaze was put out quickly.

British Bases spokeswoman Connie Pierce said Tuesday the situation is now calm following Monday’s incident. She gave no reason for the fire.

Pierce said there had been “a series of incidents” at the facility, but that authorities won’t “be going into specific detail.”

She said the 114 people, who arrived by boat at a British air base on Cyprus last month, have food, shelter, privacy and communications and that U.N. staff say the facility “exceeds the standard of comparable setups.”

Pierce repeated that the British government won’t allow a new migrant route to open up to the U.K. through its two Cyprus bases.

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12 p.m.

Serbia and Croatia have launched a direct train transfer of migrants from one country to another so asylum seekers no longer have to wait long hours outside in the cold.

Officials say that the first train carrying about 1,000 migrants left Tuesday morning from the Serbian town of Sid toward Slavonski Brod, Croatia, where authorities have set up a winter camp.

The direct train link was agreed last month after thousands of people, most of whom were families with small children, were forced to spent entire nights at a muddy border passage waiting to cross from Serbia to Croatia.

Croatian police say more than 300,000 people have passed through the country since mid-September. Most migrants want to reach wealthy nations of Western Europe, such as Germany or Sweden.

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