Hungary's Prime Minister is calling on Germany to state they will not accept any more of the refugees travelling through Europe.
Viktor Orban has warned "millions" of people will descend on
the continent if Berlin's open door policy continues - and criticised
Austria for allowing migrants to "enter its territory without
hindrance".The right-wing leader also alleged that many of those who have worked their way through Turkey, Greece, Macedonia and Serbia to the European Union were not refugees in danger - but immigrants attracted by the prospect of a German lifestyle.
In an interview with Austrian television, Mr Orban claimed the crisis could also place an intolerable financial burden on EU nations, threatening the continent's "Christian welfare states".
In the coming days, Hungary is planning to "seal off" its southern border with Serbia - effectively stopping any migrants or refugees from crossing over into the EU member state.
Thousands of migrants are travelling through the Balkans to get to Hungary
Mr Orban has defended the controversial project, and insisted Hungary is "protecting Europe according to European rules that say borders can be crossed only in certain areas in a controlled way and after registration".
The Prime Minister insisted such a system made no sense unless EU countries were able to protect their own borders.
Mark Wade, a volunteer who is helping police along Hungary's border with Serbia, has said the mass migration is on "Biblical proportions" - and is the biggest movement of people since World War Two.
"We're bussing people out - but the people are coming quicker than we can load them," he told Sky's Mark Stone.
The Hungarian government wants those arriving along the southern frontier to be sent to refugee camps close by, but they are already oversubscribed. One site is meant to hold 1,000 people, but is currently home to 1,300.
In the past 24 hours, more than 5,000 people have crossed over into Macedonia, according to Greek police.
More than 15,000 migrants arrived in Germany over the weekend, with moving footage emerging from Munich of families being reunited and refugees being cheered as they stepped off trains.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel told reporters: "We have a moving, in some parts breathtaking, weekend behind us."
About 2,500 people are expected to arrive in Bavaria, the country's largest state, by early afternoon on Monday.
Early on Monday morning, after hours of meetings held by Angela Merkel's government, Europe's wealthiest nation confirmed plans to spend €6bn next year on supporting the hundreds of thousands of new arrivals.
However, legal measures are being introduced which will make it easier to deport asylum seekers from countries considered as "secure states" - including Montenegro, Albania and Kosovo.
Those eligible to stay - often from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and Eritrea - will also receive more non-cash benefits in the future.
Germany's aid package is set to include improved housing and language classes for its refugees, along with bolstered federal police ranks.
Meanwhile, French President Francois Hollande has said his country will welcome 24,000 refugees who have fled war.
Later today, David Cameron will outline the UK Government's plans to resettle thousands of Syrian refugees, after the Prime Minister dropped his opposition to taking in more people.
That followed the international outcry at images of three-year-old Aylan Kurdi, the Syrian boy whose lifeless body was found washed up on a Turkish beach after a failed crossing to the Greek islands.






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