By Associated Press - Monday, January 21, 2019

BERLIN (AP) - The Latest on Europe’s migration crisis (all times local):

8:30 p.m.

Italian Deputy Premier Luigi Di Maio has brushed off tensions with France over remarks about Europe’s migrant crisis.



Di Maio said Sunday that France is leading colonial-style policies in Africa that are “impoverishing” Africans and driving them to Europe’s shores.

France’s Foreign Ministry then summoned the Italian ambassador over the comments.

Di Maio told journalists Monday that “I don’t think it’s a diplomatic case.” But he insisted that “it’s true, France is one of those countries” whose actions in Africa contribute to migrants leaving their homelands on dangerous journeys.

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7:05 p.m.

France’s Foreign Ministry has summoned the Italian ambassador over sharp anti-French comments from Italy about Europe’s migrant crisis.

With Italy’s government on the defensive over recent deaths at sea of migrants, Italian Deputy Premier Luigi Di Maio sought to shift the blame onto France. Speaking Sunday, Di Maio said France is leading colonial-style policies in Africa that are “impoverishing” Africans and driving them to Europe’s shores.

A French diplomatic official said Ambassador Teresa Castaldo was questioned Monday about the “unfriendly and baseless” comments. The official said they run counter to “Franco-Italian partnership” and the sense of “European community.” The diplomat wasn’t authorized to be publicly named.

De Maio’s populist 5-Star Movement is courting France’s yellow vest anti-government movement and has repeatedly criticized French President Emmanuel Macron. The two governments have notably clashed over migration.

—By Angela Charlton in Paris.

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2:10 p.m.

The German government says that in a first, more asylum-seekers were transferred to other European Union countries than Germany took in last year.

Interior Ministry spokesman Steve Alter said Germany relocated 9,209 people in 2018 under the EU regulation that requires asylum applications to be handled in the first country a person seeking protection reached in Europe.

Germany took in 7,580 people from other EU countries under the same rule last year.

The sending-receiving was disproportionately reversed in 2016, when Germany assigned 3,968 asylum-seekers elsewhere in the EU but accepted 12,091 from other countries.

More than 1 million migrants have applied for asylum in Germany since 2015, but the country has toughened its asylum laws and tried to deport more people than it did previously.

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