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Merkel Backtracks on Vice Chancellor’s Pledge to Accept 500,000 Refugees

© AP Photo / Markus SchreiberGerman Chancellor Angela Merkel attends a debate at the German parliament prior to a vote on another bailout package for Greece, in the German Bundestag in Berlin
German Chancellor Angela Merkel attends a debate at the German parliament prior to a vote on another bailout package for Greece, in the German Bundestag in Berlin - Sputnik International
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Tuesday rolled back on her coalition partner’s proposal to accept annually 500,000 refugees.

A police officer points the way as migrants arrive by train at the main railway station in Munich, Germany September 7, 2015 - Sputnik International
Berlin Cannot Take 'Whole World to Germany' Amid Migrant Crisis
BERLIN (Sputnik) — Vice Chancellor and Social-Democratic leader Sigmar Gabriel declared on Monday that Germany could cope with an annual inflow of half-a-million asylum seekers for several years, after it had opened its borders to tens of thousands of Syrians over the weekend.

On Tuesday, Merkel said that the German government had responsibilities toward its our people and reiterated her call for other EU countries to take their fair share of refugees.

"I believe we need to share migrants between all European countries. We have responsibilities toward the people of our own country to engage in full-scale diplomatic efforts to settle international conflicts," Merkel said, referencing to the conflict in Afghanistan.

She praised Vice Chancellor Gabriel for being sincere in his desire to tackle the challenges that the country faced, but said "no one can predict the future."

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Merkel also criticized the European Union’s existing rules that determine which EU member states should process asylum applications, the so-called Dublin 3 regulation.

It currently requires refugees to seek asylum in the first EU country they arrive in, putting a disproportionately large burden on frontline states like Italy, Hungary, and Greece.

"Due to the Syrian civil war, the Dublin 3 scheme does not work," Merkel said, adding the Swedish leader had agreed that the proper registration of incoming migrants and fair mandatory quotas for their redistribution within Europe were needed to address the migrant crisis.

As EU’s largest economy, Germany has agreed to accept the lion's share of the refugees – mostly from Syria, Afghanistan and Eritrea – that the European Commission plans to relocate among the EU member-states according to a quota system.

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