BRUSSELS — European Union nations bickered openly over migration policy Thursday in an east-west divide centered on several nations that refuse to accept refugee quotas.
The Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia announced that they planned to spend around 35 million euros ($41 million) to beef up EU borders after the four countries — known as the "Visegrad Four" — were criticized for failing to show solidarity with the rest of the bloc.
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte still thought it was "shameless" and said shirking responsibility by not taking in their share would wither the EU. "If we allow this then we get an EU where people go to shop for whatever they like," and give little back, he said.
Greece and Italy have had to play host to tens of thousands of migrants who have landed there after crossing the Mediterranean or Aegean seas, severely stretching the two countries' resources. They have called for help from EU partners.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose country has taken in the largest number of refugees, said the announcement by the Visegrad nations was welcome but not enough.
"We need solidarity not just in regulating and steering migration ... on the external borders. That is good and important, but we also need internal solidarity," Merkel said. "In my opinion, there cannot be selective solidarity among European member states."
EU Council President Donald Tusk said the divide "when it comes to migration, it is between east and west." He there have been complaints that eastern members were happy to get aid from their richer western partners but unwilling to live up to their part of the bargain of being in a joint endeavor.
"The European Union is not only an ATM when you need support," said Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel. "Cooperation means solidarity and responsibility."