The Latest: Serbia protests Hungary's use of tear gas
By Associated Press
Sep 16, 2015 10:42 AM CDT
Refugees rest on a bridge at the border between Austria and Germany after the police stopped them in Freilassing, southern Germany, Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2015. Hundreds of migrants have left the train station in the Austrian city of Salzburg and are trying to cross into Germany on foot to reach the nearby...   (Associated Press)

HORGOS, Serbia (AP) — The latest developments as European governments rush to cope with the huge number of people moving across Europe. All times local (CET):

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5:35 p.m.

Serbia is protesting Hungary's use of tear gas and water cannons against migrants at their shared border.

Serbian minister Aleksandar Vulin expressed "the harshest possible protest" in a live statement on Serbian state TV from the Horgos 2 border crossing where the clashes took place earlier Wednesday.

Vulin came to the border crossing after the clash and invited refugees to return to the nearby town of Kanjiza to get food, water, medical aid and rest.

He said the migrants' frustration was understandable after Hungary closed the border. Vulin says "Hungary must show it is ready and capable to accept these people."

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5:25 p.m.

The chaotic clashes at the Hungarian-Serbian border have eased but left people there stunned.

Several people fainted, including a woman holding a baby. Children and women cried while young men with scarves over their faces hurled stones as they charged toward Hungarian police through thick tear gas smoke.

The police fired tear gas, pepper spray and water cannons at the crowd as some tried to push through a border post. Ambulances with sirens wailing came from Serbia to treat the injured.

Serbian border policemen watched the clashes from a distance, some shaking their heads as tear gas canisters landed in their country. One called it an international incident that would have to be handled at a higher level.

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5:15 p.m.

The European Union is rethinking a plan to share 120,000 refugees after Hungary refused to have tens of thousands of refugees there redistributed among its EU partners.

The EU's executive Commission has proposed to relocate refugees from Greece, Italy and Hungary to other nations over the next two years. There was no immediate explanation for Hungary's stance.

Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn of Luxembourg, which holds the EU presidency, told EU lawmakers on Wednesday there would be an "important change" in the plan before it's debated by interior ministers next Tuesday.

The plan now would relocate 54,000 refugees from Hungary, 15,600 from Italy and 50,400 from Greece.

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5:05 p.m.

Hungary says it's asking Serbian authorities to take action against those attacking Hungarian riot police from the Serbian side of the border.

Clashes have broken out on Wednesday, with migrants throwing rocks and bottles at Hungarian riot police and the police replying with tear gas and water cannons.

Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto says Hungarian authorities have sent the crackdown request to the Serbian government.

Hungary closed its border with Serbia on Tuesday, creating a bottleneck of people fleeing violence in their homelands.

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4:50 p.m.

Refugees are shocked and angry after Hungarian police sprayed tear gas and water cannons at those trying to push through a border post.

Several people received medical treatment from the Serbian ambulance service at the scene of Wednesday's clash near Horgos. Most were suffering from the tear gas but one young man had a bloody leg.

"We fled wars and violence and did not expect such brutality and inhumane treatment in Europe," said Amir Hassan of Iraq, soaking wet from the water cannon and trying to wash tear gas from his eyes.

"Shame on you Hungarians!" he shouted, pointing toward the Hungarian police who were firing volleys of tear gas canisters directly into the crowd.

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4:40 p.m.

Poland says it is ready to accept a still-unspecified number of refugees over many months but wants their inflow to be controlled.

Prime Minister Ewa Kopacz made an impassioned appeal in Parliament on Wednesday for showing solidarity with those fleeing danger, saying the European Union is facing its greatest-ever humanitarian crisis. But she insisted that Poland must verify these are refugees seeking security, not just economic migrants seeking better jobs.

Interior Minister Teresa Piotrowska said 11 refugee centers can immediately offer 700 places and another 5,000 places can be quickly added at military facilities.

Warsaw has offered to take in 2,000 refugees but the EU wants it to handle 12,000.

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4:30 p.m.

Serbian police have sent ambulances to the border after Hungarian police sprayed tear gas and water cannons at migrants trying to break through a border post. It was not clear how many people were injured. Many migrants are crying from the tear gas.

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4:15 p.m.

British Home Secretary Theresa May says Britain will welcome the first group of Syrian refugees allowed in under a new resettlement program within days.

She told Parliament on Wednesday the refugees will come from camps surrounding Syria and the government is pressing hard to organize more arrivals in the coming weeks.

Prime Minister David Cameron said last week Britain would take in up to 20,000 refugees in the next five years — a substantial expansion of its resettlement program.

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4:05 p.m.

The Czech Republic's human rights minister says his country should help a much bigger number of refugees.

The Czech government has rejected a plan by the European Union for introducing mandatory quotas for accepting migrants. It has so far said the country was ready to accept 2,000 refugees.

But minister Jiri Dienstbier says Wednesday the Czech Republic should show solidarity and share the refugee burden on a voluntary basis, possibly accepting 7,000

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4 p.m.

Hungarian border police have again sprayed tear gas at migrants along the border with Serbia, triggering a panicky stampede by the crowd, which included many women and children, away from the border gate.

Many people were in tears trying to wash away the gas from their eyes.

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3:55 p.m.

Hungarian police are now spraying water cannons at migrants trying to come in at a border crossing with Serbia.

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3:50 p.m.

There's a tense standoff at the border between Hungary and Serbia after migrants broke through a razor-wire border fence and Hungarian forces hit them with pepper spray.

The Hungarian forces blocked the migrants from entering Wednesday near the Serbian town of Horgos.

Some migrant women have pushed to the front of the crowd and held small babies and children above their heads as they faced police in an obvious appeal for mercy.

Hungary on Tuesday shut down its border with Serbia, saying it had to protect the European Union's external border.

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3:40 p.m.

The German government says the leaders of Germany and Turkey have discussed the migration crisis and called for stepped-up efforts to achieve a "political solution" to end Syria's civil war.

Chancellor Angela Merkel and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan spoke by phone Wednesday. The government said Merkel praised the "enormous Turkish efforts" to take care of nearly 2 million Syrian refugees in Turkey. It added that the two leaders agreed to increase cooperation on resolving the refugee crisis, with an emphasis on combatting traffickers.

Turkey is a main point of departure for Syrians and others seeking a better life in Europe, with many setting off for Greece's eastern islands aboard flimsy boats.

3:20 p.m.

Hungarian police have used tear gas after hundreds of migrants broke through a razor wire fence on the border with Serbia.

The police stopped the crowd, who threw plastic water bottles at them. There were no reports of injuries. Several people were seen with tears in their eyes from the gas.

The crowd coming in from the Serbian border town of Horgos remained in front of the gate facing the police cordon. A Hungarian water cannon was parked facing them.

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3: 15 p.m.

Germany has seen a decline in the number of new migrants arriving since it introduced border checks on the Austrian frontier, though the influx is still significant.

Germany imposed the checks Sunday, saying it wanted to ensure that refugee arrivals were more orderly and that newcomers were registered. Until then, trains full of migrants traveled straight to Munich, where 12,200 arrived Saturday and another 7,100 came Sunday.

Interior Ministry spokesman Tobias Plate said Wednesday he doesn't yet have firm figures for migrant arrivals since then. He says the numbers "have decreased very significantly" but are still in the thousands every day.

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3 p.m.

A Hungarian court has found an Iraqi man guilty of "illegally crossing the border," the first conviction based on a new law meant to stop the huge flow of migrants into Hungary.

Hungarian media reported the judge ordered the man expelled from Hungary and banned him from returning for one year. It was expected that he would be returned to Serbia, the country that many migrants have used on their way into Hungary.

The accused said he was unaware that illegal border crossing was a crime, but the judge rejected his argument, saying "ignorance of the law doesn't excuse anybody."

The judge said the 4-meter (13-foot) border fence surrounded by razor wire should have given him a clue. The defendant also must pay 19,050 Hungarian forints ($70) in court costs.

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2:50 p.m.

Blocked by Hungary, migrants in Serbia have started entering neighboring Croatia. But that brings them into a whole new danger zone — former mine fields along the country's front line in its 1991-95 war.

Croatia's Mine Action Center says there are still 500 square kilometers (193 square miles) of suspicious areas throughout the country, but all have been clearly marked.

Center official Miljenko Vahtaric told the Associated Press there are five suspicious spots in the border area with Serbia, which migrants have started using as a new route to the European Union. He says demining teams have been working in the area for months.

Zoran Milanovic, the prime minister of Croatia, says his country is ready to accept migrants "regardless of their religion and the color of their skin" and will help them go to Germany, Scandinavia or where they want in Europe.

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2 p.m.

Syrian President Bashar Assad is blaming Europe for the migration crisis, saying it's a direct result of the West's support for extremists in Syria over the past four years.

In an interview Wednesday with Russian media, Assad accused Europe of supporting "terrorism" and providing "protection for terrorists, calling them moderates."

"If you are worried about them (refugees), stop supporting terrorists," he said, addressing Europe.

He also accused Europe of having "unacceptable" double standards.

Assad says "how can one be indignant about a drowned child and remain silent about the deaths of thousands of children, elderly people, women and men killed by terrorists in Syria?"

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1:45 p.m.

In Horgos, Serbia, confusion reigned Wednesday among migrants on whether to remain at the border with Hungary or leave for Croatia.

Hundreds were seen walking toward the crossing with Hungary around noon, while smaller groups walked in the opposite direction after hearing rumors that buses would take them toward the Croatian border. AP reporters saw no buses.

At the border, people hid from the blazing sun by sitting under bushes, sleeping under parked cars or staying inside small tents. Children and babies cried while men walked for miles to the nearest shops to buy water and food.

Ahmed Sami, a Syrian father from Aleppo, said "I don't know what to do, stay here or try some other way to cross the border?"

He says "we walked and traveled for hundreds, thousands of kilometers only to be stopped meters from the European Union. My wife and children cannot stand on their feet any more. This is tragic."

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1:30 p.m.

Hungary's foreign minister says the razor-wire fence on its border with Serbia is needed to secure the European Union's external border and will remain as long as large numbers of migrants keep trying to enter Hungary.

Minister Peter Szijjarto told The Associated Press on Wednesday that "only a physical obstacle" could help Hungary protect its border as long as migrants were able to pour into fellow EU member Greece and then make their way north.

He urged the EU to send forces to help Greece control the influx, to which Hungary would make a "massive contribution."

Szijjarto said those arriving from Serbia and applying for asylum in Hungary would be sent back to Serbia if their claims are rejected.

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1:15 p.m.

There was joy and relief Wednesday for some Syrian refugees who finally crossed into Germany.

Mohammed Al Zain, a 22-year-old economics student from Aleppo, walked into the German town of Freilassing from the Austrian city of Salzburg after being stuck waiting for 12 hours for his train to get permission to cross the border.

Squeezing his 7-year-old brother into a big bear hug, he says border guards "told us 'Welcome to Germany' and we are very happy right now."

Zain says "me and my brother, I didn't see him for one year. Finally (we are) meeting here."

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12:55 p.m.

Romania's president says the country's top defense body will discuss the migrant crisis Thursday and decide what the country must do.

Romania has agreed to take in 1,785 asylum seekers but says it is unable to absorb the 6,351 the European Commission has it to handle.

President Klaus Iohannis told lawmakers Wednesday in parliament that "we are not talking about places to stay, but people and their integration into society."

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12:40 p.m.

German police say traffickers appear to be changing tack: instead of taking migrants across the border into Germany, they are dumping them in Austria and telling them to walk over the bridges themselves.

Germany put controls on its border Sunday in an effort to catch smugglers and bring some order to the influx of tens of thousands fleeing their homelands.

Federal police spokesman Thimad Schweikl told The Associated Press on Wednesday that more than 1,000 migrants had crossed into Germany on foot in the southern region of Passau in the past 24 hours.

He says they appear to have been brought to the bridges in groups of 20 to 40 by traffickers seeking to avoid arrest.

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12:20 p.m.

Greek police say about 5,000 people have crossed the country's northern border with Macedonia in the last 24 hours.

Thousands have been crossing every day, making their way north across the Balkans overland to more prosperous European Union countries such as Germany and Sweden.

More than 250,000 have arrived in Greece so far this year, the vast majority Syrians and Afghans fleeing conflict at home and making their way to eastern Greek islands from the nearby Turkish coast.

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12 p.m.

Austrian Federal Railways has stopped all train traffic from Salzburg, near the German border, into Germany itself, citing a request from German authorities.

Thousands of migrants and refugees have taken trains from Salzburg to Munich for more than a week. Most of the people streaming into Austria from Hungary have continued on to Germany.

Railway officials say trains traveling from Salzburg through a small section of southern Germany to Austria's western province of Tyrol will continue operating.

Salzburg is only a few kilometers from the German border, however, and many people chose to walk on Wednesday.

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11:30 p.m.

Hundreds of migrants have left the train station in the Austrian city of Salzburg and are trying to cross into Germany on foot.

The migrants are aiming to reach the nearby German town of Freilassing.

An AP reporter saw German police trying to register the migrants as they reached the border on Wednesday morning.

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11:15 p.m.

Croatia's prime minister has criticized Hungary's decision to seal its border with Serbia for migrants and says Croatia will not do the same.

Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic told Parliament on Wednesday "we are ready to accept and direct those people." He adds "they will be able to pass through Croatia and we are working intensively to enable that."

Milanovic says 150 people have already crossed into Croatia to avoid Hungary's closed border and Croatia's national security council will convene to address the situation.

Referring to Hungary's fence, Milanovic says "barbed wire in Europe in the 21st century is not an answer, it's a threat."

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10:45 a.m.

Greece's coast guard has picked up hundreds of people from the sea near eastern Aegean islands as they attempted to reach Greece clandestinely from the nearby Turkish coast.

The coast guard said Wednesday it rescued 773 people in 19 separate search-and-rescue operations in the last 24 hours off the islands of Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Kos and Rhodes. The figures do not include the hundreds more who manage to reach the islands themselves, usually in overcrowded inflatable dinghies or wooden boats.

More than 250,000 people have reached Greece clandestinely so far this year, the vast majority of them Syrians or Afghans fleeing conflict at home. Few, if any, want to remain in financially strapped Greece, with most heading north overland through the Balkans to more prosperous European countries.

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9:45 a.m.

The first groups of migrants have started arriving in Croatia — a new European Union entry point after Hungary sealed off its border with Serbia with massive coils of barbed wire.

About 80 people crossed early Wednesday from the Serbian border town of Sid, following an all-night bus ride from the southern border with Macedonia.

Dozens of police and aid workers waited for the migrants in Croatia, where they are being registered. Local media say some migrants sought to cross in through nearby fields to avoid registration.

Officials say three more buses are expected to arrive in Sid later Wednesday morning.

Migrants have avoided Croatia in the past because they must still go into Hungary or Slovenia before reaching Austria or Germany.

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9:05 a.m.

Austria has begun selective controls of vehicles at three main border crossings with Hungary as it tries to impose some order over the stream of refugees and other migrants from that country.

Police say the controls, which took effect at midnight, may be extended to 10 crossings, with vehicles being stopped selectively for checks of passports and other travel documents.

Interior Minister Johanna Mikl-Leitner has said Syrians and others in danger in their home countries can continue to ask for asylum in Austria. She says they will also be free to travel on to Germany.

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