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UK Morals at Play Over EU Asylum Game Changer

© AP Photo / Alexander ZemlianichenkoA Syrian migrant boy still wearing a swimming ring stands on the beach upon his arrival with other migrants by a dinghy at the southeastern Greek island of Kos, Greece, early Thursday, Aug. 20, 2015.
A Syrian migrant boy still wearing a swimming ring stands on the beach upon his arrival with other migrants by a dinghy at the southeastern Greek island of Kos, Greece, early Thursday, Aug. 20, 2015. - Sputnik International
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Two of Europe's powerhouses have agreed to back binding quotas, for all EU member states to share the number of asylum seekers arriving on its shores. In what’s been described as a 'game changer' in the response to the refugee crisis so far, France and Germany have agreed to back Brussels' program.

Sticking firmly to her stance on solidarity, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said:

"The French-German position, which we will transit to the European institutions, is that we agree that…we need binding quotas within the European Union to share the burden."

"This is the principle of solidarity," Merkel told reporters, insisting "those who need protection…get it."

European leaders have been squabbling all summer over a quota system proposed by the European Commissioner Jean-Claude Juncker to reasonably share 120,000 asylum seekers. But with France and Germany joining Italy and throwing their weight behind Brussels, member states may be faced with no choice but to tighten up their asylum system.

France has agreed to send proposals to Brussels "for organizing the welcome of refugees and their fair distribution in Europe", adding that "dramas are being followed by tragedies".

Dramatic pictures of refugees, migrants and asylum seekers stranded at Hungary’s international railway station in Budapest unable to leave for Germany and Austria emerged after the Hungarian authorities banished them from boarding trains.

A migrant child's dead body lies off the shores in Bodrum, southern Turkey, on September 2, 2015 after a boat carrying refugees sank while reaching the Greek island of Kos. - Sputnik International
Refugee Crisis: Picture Says 1000 Words While EU Leaders Say Nothing‏

But the most tragic picture to emerge from the refugee crisis is of a little boy from Syria, Aylan Kurdi, washed up on a Turkish shore – a refugee with a name. A game-changer maybe?

EU leaders have so far been accused of putting borders before people, erecting razor wire fences and reinforcing border controls to prevent migrants and asylum seekers from moving.

Refugee camps from Calais to Serbia to Kos have been condemned for the conditions people are living in.

© AP Photo / Santi PalaciosRefugees get off a train at the Macedonian station of Tabanovce, a few hundred meters away from the border with Serbia, on Friday Aug. 28, 2015.
Refugees get off a train at the Macedonian station of Tabanovce, a few hundred meters away from the border with Serbia, on Friday Aug. 28, 2015. - Sputnik International
Refugees get off a train at the Macedonian station of Tabanovce, a few hundred meters away from the border with Serbia, on Friday Aug. 28, 2015.

At a recent summit in Vienna, EU leaders were once again forced to face the situation on their doorstep when an abandoned truck was discovered in Austria with 71 dead men, women and children inside who had suffocated to death.

And now the moral pressure on ministers has been ramped up with Germany and France backing the binding agreement to share asylum seekers between member states.

But will other countries listen? The game-changing stance from two of Europe’s powerhouses is about to play with Britain. 

Men wearing face masks of British Prime Minister David Cameron - Sputnik International
UK Refugee Policy Risks PM Losing EU Reform Battle With Brussels

Prime Minister David Cameron has pledged to reform and renegotiate the UK’s relationship with Brussels to reduce political power the EU has over Britain’s policies. However, in recent days Cameron has been threatened by Austria and Germany that if he doesn’t renegotiate his own party’s stance on refugee quotas — his chances of reform would be slim.

Following the tragic images of Aylan Kurdi, a petition calling on the UK to accept more asylum seekers and increase support for refugees has received more than 207,000 signatures. Only 100,000 are needed for the campaign to be debated in parliament.

The "moral responsibilities" that David Cameron says he will keep in response to the refugee crisis are set to be tested over whether the UK will reject or accept the common EU asylum policy. Either way the PM decides to play it — the decision is likely to leave a legacy on Britain’s future within the EU.

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