On Wednesday, the European Commission urged the bloc’s members to take in 40,000 people fleeing Syria and Eritrea to Italy and Greece. The refugees would be redistributed across member states using quotas based on a country's gross domestic product, unemployment rate and the size of its documented immigrant population. Earlier, the commission suggested taking in another 20,000 migrants to the EU over two years.
Ministers Bernard Cazeneuve and Thomas de Maiziere stressed that the measures taken last week are ill-balanced.
"At the moment, 75 percent of those who applied for asylum are planned to be redistributed among five European countries – France, Germany, Sweden, Italy and Hungary," the statement said.
Europe is currently struggling with a spike in undocumented migration, as thousands of migrants fleeing conflicts in North Africa and the Middle East attempt to reach European coasts via the Mediterranean Sea.
According to the United Nations, some 60,000 people have tried to cross the Mediterranean this year. More than 1,800 migrants died at sea while attempting to reach Europe in 2015.