Europe Migrant Crisis - Sept. 9, 2015

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker calls on EU countries to agree by next week to share 160,000 refugees, in his address to the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, Sept. 9, 2015. He warns that Greece, Italy and Hungary can no longer cope alone.

 Junker urges Europe to face the current refugee crisis with solidarity.

Hungary has closed its M5 highway after groups of migrants broke through a police cordon at Roszke on the border with Serbia and set off on foot towards the motorway, police said on their website. Police escort migrants back to a collection point in the village of Roszke.

Migrants jump over a road protection fence as they leave a collection point in the village of Roszke.

They wrap themselves in blankets to warm up as the sun rises.

They gather at the railway track in a camp near the Hungarian border with Serbia, in Roszke. Leaders of the United Nations refugee agency warn that Hungary faces a bigger wave of migrants in the next few days and will need international help to provide aid and shelter on its border.

In the southern Macedonian town of Gevgelija, migrants sit on the ground at a refugee camp, Sept. 8, 2015. Hundred of thousands migrants and refugees trying to reach the heart of Europe via Turkey, Greece, the Balkans and Hungary have faced dangers, difficulties and delays on every link of the journey.

The migrants, mainly from Syria and Iraq and hoping to get to Sweden, arrived at Rodby and refused to leave the train to get registered in Denmark. This child cries and tries to prevent his mother from leaving a train to get into a bus at Rodby train station, south of Denmark.

France is ready to take in 24,000 refugees as part of European Union plans to welcome more than 100,000 in the next two years, the French President Francois Hollande said. These refugees from Syria and Irak speak with doctors before a medical check after their arrival at the Hubert Renaud centre in Cergy-Pontoise near Paris.