The managing board of EU border agency Frontex said Thursday (21 January) it did not find evidence of rights violations in cases it reviewed where guards were accused of illegal migrant pushbacks.
But the body added that its conclusions only applied to some of the incidents at issue, saying it needs additional clarifications to complete the remaining reviews.
Members, including representatives from EU nations and two from the European Commission, discussed an internal report on allegations that Frontex guards helped force migrants out of EU waters and back to Turkey.
The board said in a statement that “on the basis of the information provided, it could not establish evidence of fundamental rights violations.”
But it added that it was “very concerned” that the agency had not provided information on certain incidents in time.
It called on Frontex chief Fabrice Leggeri to “immediately provide the missing information” and to implement various recommended agency improvements.
The meeting came after media and rights organisations had documented multiple cases of Frontex border officers, alongside national counterparts in EU countries, forcing migrants back, particularly along Greece’s sea border with Turkey.
Such actions prevent asylum-seekers making claims for refugee status, and if practised indiscriminately against a group of migrants can constitute “refoulement” – a violation of EU human rights laws and the 1951 Geneva Convention.
The EU’s independent corruption watchdog confirmed this month that it was investigating Frontex over the allegations.
Reports said officials from the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) searched Frontex headquarters in the Polish capital Warsaw.
Several MEPs have called for Leggeri’s resignation, but Frontex said Wednesday the executive director had no plans to resign.
On Thursday, Leggeri tweeted: “I am pleased that so far the working group did not find evidence of any Frontex involvement in alleged pushbacks.”
The EU Commissioner for Home Affairs, Ylva Johansson, for her part said on Twitter that “it is in the long-term interests of the agency that the recommendations are met and that the remaining open questions are resolved immediately.”
Created in 2004, Frontex has become the first EU agency to build up a standing, uniformed force. It aims to have 10,000 border guards on its payroll by 2027.
Earlier this week, the agency became embroiled in a controversy around a €94,000 annual dinner organised in Warsaw in 2015. Members of the European Parliament have since pushed to open an official inquiry into the revelations as negotiations on the agency’s mandate and scope continue.
*first published in: www.euractiv.com