|  | 
| Macedonia sealed its border with Greece to illegal migrants after 
Slovenia, Croatia and Serbia, which are on the way to Austria, announced
 tight new restrictions on migrant entry. | 
   
  
   
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
   
 
   
 
  
South-eastern Europe’s “Balkan route”, the main passage for 
migrants to reach more affluent countries to the north, will remain 
closed permanently, Austria’s Interior Minister Johanna Mikl-Leitner 
told German newspaper “Die Welt” on Thursday.
On
 Wednesday, Macedonia sealed its border with Greece to illegal migrants 
after Slovenia, Croatia and Serbia, which are on the way to Austria, 
announced tight new restrictions on migrant entry.
“My position is clear: the Balkan route remains closed and that permanently,” Mikl-Leitner told the newspaper.
She
 said only such a “consistent signal” will deter migrants, many of them 
fleeing war and conflict in the Middle East and beyond, from crossing 
the Mediterranean from Turkey to reach European shores.
As
 a result of the route’s closure, thousands of migrants have built up on
 the Greek side of the Macedonian border and around 1,000 more are 
stranded in a refugee camp on the Macedonian side of the Serbian border.
“This
 alliance of reason has so far provided the decisive contribution to 
preserve stability and order for the people in Europe,” Mikl-Leitner 
said in reference to the Balkan countries along the route.
In
 late February, Austria set off what it called a “domino effect” of 
national restrictions by imposing daily caps on the number of migrants 
to limit the flow of people towards it.
Last
 year, over 1.5 million migrants arrived in Europe, unleashing fierce 
political debates across the continent over how to handle the crisis.
 
 
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