Crisis Escalates at Turkey-Greece Border

Since Turkey said last week it would no longer stop
refugees from crossing into Europe, more than 10,000 migrants—including many
from Syria and Afghanistan—have arrived at its land borders with EU countries
and at least 1,000 have landed on Greece’s eastern Aegean islands. Greek
authorities have responded with tear gas and a halt to asylum requests. The
rush to the border is already fueling a crisis. A child died when a boat
capsized on Monday, and Turkish security sources have reported at least one
Syrian migrant was killed at the land border.
Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European
Commission, is expected to visit the Greek-Turkish border today. She has
expressed sympathy with Turkey’s “difficult situation”—hosting more than 3
million refugees—but condemned its move to let them leave its territory for
Europe. German Chancellor Angela Merkel criticized Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan directly, calling the decision “unacceptable.”
But Erdogan doubled down on Monday. “The period of
single-sided sacrifice has come to an end,” he said. “The number of people who
are headed toward Europe since the moment we opened our borders has reached
hundreds of thousands. This figure will soon reach millions.” (These figures do
not correspond to eyewitness accounts and appear to be vastly inflated.)
Can Greece stop accepting asylum seekers? Greek
Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis announced Sunday that Greece would stop
taking new asylum requests for a month. The U.N. refugee agency said Monday
that it has no right to do so under international or EU law, even as the EU
rushes to help Greece police its border.
Driving displacement. Meanwhile, the Syrian
government offensive that has displaced at least 1 million people continues in
the country’s northwest. The fighting has escalated in recent days, and
President Bashar al-Assad’s troops reentered a strategic town on Monday.
Turkey, which supports some rebel groups, has said it will keep up drone
strikes against the Syrian army.
Turkey’s decision to allow migrants to cross into
Europe was intended to get EU leaders to come to its aid against Assad—but so
far it isn’t working, Tessa Fox reports for FP from the Turkey-Greece border.
Netanyahu declares victory, hasn’t won yet. With 90
percent of the votes counted, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu holds a
narrow lead in Israel’s parliamentary elections, but appears just short of a
majority as the final results trickle in. Netanyahu declared victory on Monday
night based on exit polls that showed his party was ahead of rival Benny
Gantz’s Blue and White party and only one or two seats away from a governing
majority.
Despite Netanyahu’s Likud party winning 36
seats—while Gantz’s party took 32, according to preliminary results—the
Likud-led right-wing bloc still appears to have won only 59 seats in Israel’s
Knesset, two seats short of the 61 needed for a majority.
That means more deadlock is possible after what
could be a third inconclusive election in less than a year. Still, Netanyahu
has a solid chance of forming the next government, Joshua Mitnick reports for
FP. A victory would be a major boost for the prime minister, who is set to face
a corruption trial on March 17.
Millions vote in U.S. Democratic primaries. Today,
14 U.S. states hold presidential primaries with the potential to greatly shape
the race, with around one-third of total delegates up for grabs. Heading into
Super Tuesday, the Democratic field has already changed dramatically. Three
candidates have withdrawn since Saturday, including Sen. Amy Klobuchar and
former Mayor Pete Buttigieg—both of whom dropped out and endorsed former Vice
President Joe Biden. The exits in part suggest a push to boost the moderate
Biden over frontrunner Sen. Bernie Sanders. But they could benefit the other
candidates, especially Sen. Elizabeth Warren and former Mayor Michael
Bloomberg.
WHO warns of stigma as coronavirus spreads. The
coronavirus is now spreading almost nine times as quickly outside of China as
inside, and the World Health Organization (WHO) has warned that stigma is “the
most dangerous enemy.” On Monday, a WHO technical team and a shipment of
medical supplies arrived in Iran, where 66 people have been reported dead from
the virus, including a senior government official. South Korea, meanwhile, has
recorded 4,335 cases—the most outside China—and announced it would launch a murder
investigation into the leaders of the church at the center of the outbreak in
the city of Daegu.
Global markets were calm on Monday, on hopes that
governments would take action to soften the blow to the economy. The European
Union is mulling fiscal policy options to be decided later this month.
AMLO’s approval ratings. Mexican President Andrés
Manuel López Obrador is suffering in opinion polls, as respondents say that
violence in the country is on the rise—particularly against women. López
Obrador’s support had remained steady since he took office in December 2018,
but two new polls show that his approval rating has fallen—a sign that he’s
feeling the effects of a record number of homicides and a struggling economy.
Barrier to Afghan peace talks. After signing an
agreement with the United States on Saturday, the Taliban is refusing to take
part in peace talks with the Afghan government unless it releases 5,000 Taliban
prisoners. The demand, rejected by President Ashraf Ghani, presents a significant
barrier to the peace process proposed by the U.S.-Taliban agreement. The
Taliban also announced that a seven-day reduction of violence had formally
ended.
India’s communal violence. Indian lawmakers have
clashed over the religious riots that killed at least 45 people—mostly
Muslims—in Delhi last week. Conducted with some complicity on the part of the
police, the violence bears the hallmarks of an organized pogrom—and could be
repeated in other parts of the country, Brown University professor Ashutosh
Varshney tells FP’s Ravi Agrawal.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said Monday that
he was considering deleting his social media accounts, including Facebook,
Twitter, and Instagram. He didn’t provide a reason, but removing himself from
social media could distance the prime minister from some hot-button issues,
such as the protests against his government’s controversial citizenship law.
Still, Modi is one of the most popular world leaders on Twitter: He has 58
million followers.