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Turkey won't host 'inhumane' migrant processing centre: PM

Instead of sorting refugees from migrants at a controversial centre, Ahmet Davutoglu said Syrian refugees should live in safe zones inside their country
Syrians refugees living in a tent city in Turkey's southeastern Sanliurfa province (AA)

Turkey's Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on Monday ruled out creating a processing centre for thousands of mostly Syrian refugees trying to enter Europe from Turkish territory, calling instead for them to be hosted in "safe zones" inside Syria.

Responding to repeated calls by EU members for asylum claims to be handled in the countries from which they set sail for Europe, Davutoglu told Hurriyet newspaper: "We have told Europe that there will be no reception centre in Turkey."

Last week, EU leaders agreed to boost aid for Turkey and other countries neighbouring Syria, which have taken in the bulk of the more-than four million people fleeing the Syrian civil war and Islamic State militants.

They also vowed to strengthen the bloc's outer frontiers and create controversial centres in frontline states like Greece and Italy to sort refugees from economic migrants more quickly.

Davutoglu said such centres were "unacceptable" and "inhumane" and repeated Turkey's call for the formation of a safe zone inside Syria stretching from Azaz to Jarablus in the north.

"If Azaz-Jarablus is cleared (of Islamic State extremists), we can establish three cities there each hosting 100,000 people," said the Turkish premier.

"You (Europe) will undertake the financial costs and we will build it," he proposed.

Davutoglu, who met with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in New York over the weekend, said that Turkey and Germany would join forces to tackle the refugee crisis. 

"At first, we will form a bilateral mechanism and later will include Greece if necessary," he said, without elaborating further.

Many of the Syrian refugees pouring into Europe have been living in Turkey for months, even years.

"What's good here is that we have for years wanted to draw attention to the humanitarian crises caused by the Syrian crisis, but the international community left the table and put the burden on Turkey," Davutoglu said.

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