SOFIA, Bulgaria (AP) — The latest news as migrants fleeing war or seeking a better life make their way across Europe by the tens of thousands. All times local.
12:20 p.m.
Swedish prosecutors have indicted an Eritrean asylum-seeker on two counts of murder for the stabbing deaths of a 55-year-old woman and her 27-year-old son at an Ikea furniture store in August.
Just before the attacks, the man had learned that his application for asylum was rejected.
Prosecutors said the man used kitchen knives from the store in Vasteras, central Sweden, to stab the two victims. He then slashed himself in the stomach.
Chief prosecutor Eva Moren told reporters that the man had confessed to the Aug. 10 attacks, saying he had been thinking about killing someone or himself if he wasn't allowed to stay in Sweden. She didn't identify him, in line with Swedish custom.
Moren said he chose the victims randomly. His lawyer didn't immediately return calls seeking comment.
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12:05 p.m.
Authorities in Greece are investigating a series of allegations that Syrian refugees who entered the country by land from Turkey were robbed and forced back across the border by Greek police.
A judicial official said Friday that Thessaloniki prosecutor Lefteris Michailidis has ordered the police internal affairs squad to investigate more than 20 complaints forwarded by human rights groups. The official spoke on condition of anonymity.
The refugees claimed the attacks took place earlier this year in the northeastern Evros region, where Greece and Turkey are separated by a river that can be easily crossed in the summer. They said Greek police stole their money and belongings before pushing them back across the river.
Greece is the main gateway for people from the Middle East and Africa seeking a better life in Europe. Most enter by sea.
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11:20 a.m.
A Spanish court has ruled that 16 police officers had done nothing wrong to contribute to the drowning of 15 migrants as they tried to swim from Morocco to the Spanish North African enclave of Ceuta last year.
In a ruling released Friday, the Ceuta court said nothing indicated the Civil Guard officers acted incorrectly.
Rights groups blamed the drownings on the officers' use of rubber bullets and smoke canisters.
Interior Ministry videos showed police firing rubber bullets as the migrants swam toward Ceuta's shore on Feb. 6, 2014, but officials denied the action contributed to the drowning.
Ceuta is one of two Spanish enclaves surrounded by Morocco and the Mediterranean Sea.
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11:05 a.m.
Slovenia's prime minister has warned of a "domino effect" if Hungary closes its border with Croatia to stop the flow of migrants trying to reach Western Europe.
Miro Cerar is quoted as saying late Thursday in Brussels "there is a realistic possibility" that Hungary will seal the Croatian border where it has already put up a fence. Cerar says migrants then likely would turn to Slovenia and the country is preparing for such a possibility.
But Cerar also warns that "if borders north of us would start getting closed or much tighter controls were applied, Slovenia will act reciprocally in the same way," according to the official STA news agency.
He adds "we cannot let an unchecked number of refugees or migrants flood Slovenia."
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10:55 a.m.
Croatia's prime minister says the country has prepared for the possibility that Hungary will close its border to stop the flow of migrants trying to reach Western Europe.
Zoran Milanovic said late Thursday in Brussels that "Croatia has a solution, Hungary can do whatever it wants." He adds "we have a plan for Croatia to remain safe and without any problems for our citizens."
Milanovic has not said what Croatia would do, but says: "Croatia can always also build a fence, but we don't want that, it's the last option."
More than 180,000 migrants have passed through the country since mid-September. Hungary has put up fences to stop the migrant influx. It has sealed the border with Serbia and will decide Friday whether to do the same with Croatia.
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10:50 a.m.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban says the country's national security cabinet on Friday afternoon will discuss the possible closure of the border with Croatia at all but official crossing points, after his return from Brussels where EU leaders have been discussing ways to stem the flow of migrants.
Hungarian government spokesman Zoltan Kovacz says the police are prepared to enforce any decision immediately.
Hungary has built a fence along most of its border with the fellow EU member Croatia after completing a similar barrier toward Serbia last month. That barrier has diverted the flow toward Croatia, from where thousands cross into Hungary daily. More than 380,000 migrants have entered Hungary this year alone, though the vast majority of them have moved on toward the rest of the EU.
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10:25 a.m.
Boris Cheshirkov, the Bulgarian representative of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, says some 3,100 migrants have died this year while attempting to reach the European Union, but the incident at the Bulgarian-Turkish border on Thursday was the first case of a fatal shooting on the borders of the EU.
"We are deeply shocked and regret the fatal incident," Cheshirkov said. "We are convinced that barriers, fences and police forces cannot solve the problems of people who are in a desperate situation."
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9:50 a.m.
Bulgarian authorities say a man from Afghanistan has been shot dead near the border with Turkey after being hit by a ricochet from a warning shot fired by border police.
Interior Ministry chief of staff Georgi Kostov said that the incident occurred around 10 p.m. on Thursday near the southern city of Sredets.
"A group of 54 people, aged between 20 and 30 - all from Afghanistan - was intercepted by a patrol of two border guards and a police officer after crossing into Bulgarian territory," Kostov told reporters Friday morning.
"One of my colleagues used his personal weapon and fired," Kostov said. As a result of a ricochet, he said, one of the group was injured and later died from his wounds.
The other migrants were detained and taken into custody while an investigation into the case was launched. The men claimed they were from Afghanistan but carried no identification documents.
On learning of the case, Bulgarian Prime Minister Boiko Borisov left the meeting of European Union leaders in Brussels and returned to Bulgaria
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This corrects an earlier story to say that the 3,100 deaths mentioned by Bulgarian diplomat Boris Cheshirkov were all this year