For now, Ibginedion, along with her husband and their 16-month-old daughter, Glory — born after the couple applied for asylum in Malta — live in a drab, one-room pre-fab container home without running water, in a migrant center outside Valletta. The question of where migrants end up in Europe is an important one for EU and African leaders seeking to map a migrant strategy during the two-day summit starting Wednesday, especially on the issue of mechanisms to repatriate migrants Europe says don't qualify for asylum. The Maltese government's refugee commissioner, Mario Friggieri, dismissed fears harbored by some migrants that they would languish for long months in severe detention centers in Malta — proudly pointing to Malta's high asylum approval rate. [...] the U.N.