The biggest migrant crisis to hit Europe since World War II spiralled further as chaotic scenes erupted at a Hungarian border town with police firing tear gas, and Budapest mulling a troop deployment to stem a record influx of asylum-seekers.
Alarmed by the worsening situation, UN chief Ban Ki-moon urged countries "in Europe and elsewhere to prove their compassion and do much more to bring an end to the crisis".
The thousands of migrants and refugees who brave perilous journeys "should not, when they arrive, encounter new challenges," Ban said during a visit to Paris today.
Hungary is building a vast razor-wire barrier to keep migrants out, while Czech deputy prime minister Andrej Babis has called for the visa-free Schengen zone be closed with the help of NATO troops.
Germany, which is preparing to receive a record 800,000 asylum-seekers this year, confirmed yesterday that it has eased the asylum application procedure for Syrians fleeing the country's brutal civil war.
But Berlin's largesse has not been welcomed by everyone at home, particularly in the east where a spate of attacks has hit refugee centres.
But the German leader vowed: "There will be no tolerance of those who question the dignity of other people."
She added that the more people there are who carry this message, "the stronger we will be and the better we will be able to address this task" of caring for refugees.
Separately, President Joachim Gauck blasted a "dark Germany" behind the series of xenophobic attacks.
Public opinion was largely behind the leaders, with 60 percent of Germans polled by public broadcaster ZDF saying that Europe's biggest economy was capable of hosting the asylum-seekers.
The macabre discovery adds to a toll of 2,370 people who have drowned in the Mediterranean since the beginning of 2015, already exceeding the death toll for the whole of 2014, according to the International Organisation for Migration.
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