Brussels: The European Union (EU) executive concluded on Wednesday that Greece could face more border controls with other states of the free-travel Schengen zone in May if it does not fix "serious deficiencies" in its management of the area's external frontier.
EU countries have been increasingly critical of Athens' handling of the continent's worst migration crisis since World War II, with more than a million migrants reaching Europe last year, mainly through Greece.
"If the necessary action is not being taken and deficiencies persist, there is a possibility to... allow member states to temporarily close their borders," European Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis told a news briefing.
He was speaking after the executive accepted a report saying cash-strapped Athens had "seriously neglected" its obligations to fellow Schengen states.
The use of that phrase could pave the way for EU governments to exercise the option of reinstalling controls on their national borders for up to two years once short-term measures currently in place expire in May.
Several EU member states have instituted emergency controls on their borders and warned they may effectively suspend Athens from the passport-free zone. Most of the irregular migrants arriving in the EU have come from Turkey via Greece and trekked northward to Germany.
Dombrovskis said Greece was not identifying or registering people arriving effectively, not uploading fingerprinting data to relevant bases systematically, and not checking travel documents properly and against key databases.
EU border agency Frontex says its latest mission to the Greek island of Lesbos in January showed improvements in registration procedures.
But EU officials carried out an assessment in Greece in November that lead to Wednesday's conclusion that there were "serious deficiencies" in Greek frontier control.
The step of imposing border controls, under the as yet unused Article 26 of the Schengen code, can be taken for up to six months and can be renewed up to three times for a total of two years.
Dombrovskis said the Commission was intent on preserving Schengen, one of the EU's key achievements, and said Greece had improved its border controls since November - but not enough.
The next step in the process would be for Schengen member states - 26 countries, most of which are also in the EU - to confirm the Commission's conclusions in a majority vote. The executive would then recommend remedial measures and assess by May whether Athens had complied.
Greece has no land borders with the rest of the Schengen zone, so installing new frontier checks would affect only air and sea ports.
Diplomats and officials described the move to penalise tourism-dependent Greece as a way to raise pressure on Athens, which is already mired in a financial crisis, to better implement EU measures intended to identify and register all those arriving from Turkey.
The EU is also looking into using Frontex more to help guard the border between Greece and Macedonia, which is not a member of the EU or Schengen. Some Frontex personnel are already at Greece's northern border, but the agency's mandate does not allow for interventions in third countries.
Some diplomats said countries could send more police or border guards to Macedonia on the basis of bilateral agreements.
Frontex has a precedent from 2006, when it ran a naval mission in territorial waters off Senegal and Mauritania to prevent African migrants reaching Spain's Canary Islands. That operation was carried out on the basis of bilateral agreements between Spain, Dakar and Nouakchott.
"Details would need to be worked out but there seems to be very little opposition to this idea, apart, of course, from Greece," said one EU diplomat involved.
Athens says the influx is impossible to control and its migration minister, Yannis Mouzalas, warned this week that sealing his country off from Schengen would create a humanitarian crisis with thousands of people trapped in Greece.