Austria says it can't keep this up much longer. Germany says it can't, either.
After
absorbing more than 12,000 refugees, Austria wants to see a gradual
reduction in the numbers of refugees coming through, Austrian Chancellor
Werner Faymann said.
"We
have always said this is an emergency situation, which we have to handle
quickly and humanely," Faymann said Sunday. "We have helped more than
12,000 people in an acute situation. We must now step by step go from
emergency measures to a normality that is humane and complies with the
law."
The United Nations' refugee agency, UNHCR, estimates
that 366,402 refugees and migrants have crossed the Mediterranean Sea
to Europe this year, with 2,800 dead or missing. Those who make the
crossing face uncertain futures in European nations, which differ in
their approach to asylum seekers.
Austria's
border with Hungary remains open to potential refugees, Austrian
Interior Ministry spokesman Alexander Marakovits said Sunday, and packed
buses and trains continued to arrive.
Despite
the government's desire to curb migrant flow, there has been an
outpouring of support from Austrians. Many have brought food and water
and cheered for the refugees pouring onto the platform at Vienna's train
station.
The Austrian Red Cross has also been on hand to provide medical supplies and warm blankets.
One recent arrival, standing with his two daughters, told CNN of the family's difficult journey through Hungary.
"We
went through a torture," he said. "We walked 110 kilometers (68 miles)
with the children. They didn't allow us to take cars or trains."
But
the Hungarian people, he said, "were very nice. We arrived here safely,
and we are comfortable here, and we like the people and the government
of Austria."
Most of the arrivals
in Austria intend to travel farther into Europe, however. Of the
thousands who have arrived there this weekend, only a dozen or so have
opted to apply for asylum there, the country's Interior Ministry said.
German patience tried
Germany
is attractive to refugees because of its robust economy, strong
democracy and long history of taking in refugees. But it, too, can't
keep taking in refugees at the current pace.
"The
great helpfulness that Germany has shown in these last weeks and months
should not be worn thin," the Interior Ministry said in a statement
Sunday.
It called for all European countries to work together and share responsibility.
"Only
if that is guaranteed can Germany continue its do its part in helping
the large number of asylum-seekers," the statement said.
Foreign
Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said as much Saturday, telling his
European counterparts that Germany's acceptance of the thousands fleeing
conflicts in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan must not be the practice in
the coming days, according to the website of the German newspaper Die Zeit.
The
government has said it will accept 800,000 applications for asylum from
refugees. A poll released by broadcaster ARD on Thursday found 88% of
Germans willing to donate clothes or money to refugees, and 67% willing
to volunteer to help them.
Some
5,000 migrants arrived on Sunday at the train station in Munich,
according to police there. The country's interior ministry said around
8,000 arrived in southern Germany the day before.
After
arriving, the people are registered, fingerprinted and brought to
shelters or temporary housing such as university dorms or even shipping
containers that have been converted into living spaces.
Pope implores European Catholics to help
Pope
Francis implored Catholic institutions throughout Europe on Sunday to
show mercy to the flood of refugees arriving on their shores by offering
them shelter.
"May every
parish, every religious community, every monastery, every sanctuary of
Europe host a family, starting from my diocese of Rome," Francis said at
the end of his Angelus prayers in Rome.
"The two parishes in the Vatican these days will welcome two families of refugees."
The
Pope's urging came as more than 12,000 migrants poured into Austria on
Sunday, the Interior Ministry said, arriving at train stations to
applause, cheers and pats on the back from Austrians eager to help them.
There
were similar scenes at train stations in Germany. In Saalfeld, a crowd
of locals stood on the platform clapping and singing in English, "Say it
loud, say it clear, refugees are welcome here" as migrants arrived.

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