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This is an archive article published on September 14, 2007

Europe mulls ‘blue card’ for Asian migrants

The European countries, including Britain, may soon open their borders to an extra 20 million Asian workers.

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Good news for those planning to emigrate to Europe. The European countries, including Britain, may soon open their borders to an extra 20 million workers from Asia.

Yes, the European Union is planning to introduce a new ‘blue card’ scheme modelled on the American ‘green card’ work permit, the media reported here today, quoting EU’s Justice Commissioner Franco Frattini as saying.

According to Frattini, the ‘Blue EU Labour Card’ would allow qualified migrants from Asian and African countries the right to live, work and travel in the 27 member states. “The plan will be unveiled next month,” he said.

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The card would entitle skilled migrants to work in a member state for two years and then move to a second EU member country after two or three years, he said. “The workers could apply to stay permanently after five consecutive years in any EU state and would be free to travel where they wished.”

“The challenge is to attract the workers needed to fill specific gaps,” Frattini said, highlighting that only five per cent of immigrants coming to the EU are skilled workers, compared to 55 per cent arriving in the US.

He said Europe desperately needed labour, both skilled and unskilled, because of a fall in the population of working age. “By 2050, a third of residents in the 27 countries would be aged over 65.”

Though Britain — which is moving to a points-based work permit system from next year aimed at attracting more skilled workers and removing settlement rights from unskilled migrants — is not signed up to common EU borders, it would still be affected if the plans went ahead.

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However, the British government has said that it would decide on the proposal after studying the pros and cons.

“The European Union has not yet issued any proposals for a ‘blue card’ scheme but we would consider any such proposals carefully. The UK has the right to opt in to EU measures on immigration and we would only decide to do this if the proposals were consistent with our national approach to managed migration,” a spokesman for the Home Office said.

But, opposition Tories in Britain have criticized the EU’s proposal.

“Since this would be in addition to already large-scale immigration, the stress placed on housing, public services and community relations in the UK would be enormous.

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It is vital that the UK Government retains complete control over who is allowed to come to the UK.

“It should not allow the EU to create loopholes that would make a mockery of a sensible, well-balanced immigration system,” David Davis, the Shadow Home Secretary, was quoted by the British media as saying.

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