The Latest: Germany budgets $6.6 billion for next year to support migrants

Refugees and migrants wait to pass the borders from the northern Greek village of Idomeni, to southern Macedonia, Monday, Sept. 7, 2015. The country has borne the brunt of a massive refugee and migration flow of people heading into the European Union. (AP Photo/Giannis Papanikos) (The Associated Press)

Smoke billows from a asylum seekers shelter in Rottenburg am Neckar, southern Germany, Monday, Sept. 7, 2015. Five people were injured in the fire. Police couldn't give immediately a reason for the fire. (Marijan Murat/dpa via AP) (The Associated Press)

A migrant woman carries a child on her shoulders as they walk along railway tracks to cross the border between Serbia and Hungary, near Horgos, Serbia, Monday, Sept. 7, 2015. Frontex, the EU border agency, says more than 340,000 asylum seekers have entered the 28-nation bloc this year, the majority fleeing war and human rights abuses in Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia and Eritrea. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic) (The Associated Press)

The latest news as countries across Europe cope with the arrival of thousands of migrants and refugees. All times local (CET):

9: a.m.

The German government says it will spend 6 billion euros ($6.6 billion) next year to support the hundreds of thousands of migrants coming to Germany.

In a-late night meeting lasting until early Monday in Berlin, Chancellor Angela Merkel's coalition government also agreed to introduce legal measures making it easier to deport-asylum seekers from countries considered "secure states" like Montenegro, Kosovo and Albania. Asylum-seekers will also get less cash in the future and more non-cash benefits.

German officials recently predicted that up to 800,000 migrants will arrive by the end of the year, many of them refugees fleeing war and persecution in Syria, Iraq and Eritrea.

The government's aid package will include improved housing, more federal police and language classes.

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9:00 a.m.

Greece's coast guard says a ferry sailing between the mainland and the country's eastern Aegean islands has been involved in a rescue of refugees or migrants near the island of Lesbos.

The coast guard said Monday the Blue Star 1 ferry had picked up 35 people from the sea, while it also notified the coast guard, which picked up a further 26 people. The exact circumstances of the incident were unclear.

All 61 were being transported to Lesbos, the island on which most of the those entering Greece clandestinely arrive. Greece has seen more than 230,000 refugees and migrants enter the country so far this year. The vast majority do not want to stay in the financially stricken country, and head to the more prosperous European north on an overland route.