UN tells Europe it must do more to help Syria refugees

AFP

Syria refugees

GENEVA- Europe has taken in only a "minuscule" number of refugees from Syria and must do more to help the war-torn country's neighbours shoulder the burden, the UN's refugee agency said Friday.
"We're calling on European countries to strengthen their response to the Syrian crisis," said Melissa Fleming, spokeswoman for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
"We're urging states to ensure access to their territory, we're urging states to ensure fair and efficient asylum procedures," she told reporters.

Since the conflict began in March 2011, around 123,600 Syrians have sought asylum in Europe, crossing land borders or making risky trips across the Mediterranean.
Over half of the claims have been in Germany and Sweden, which were already among the most generous providers of a haven for refugees from around the globe, and are home to large Syrian communities.
Under a UN programme, 17 countries have also offered almost 32,000 resettlement places for the most vulnerable refugees, but the UNHCR wants the number to be raised to 100,000 by 2016.
"Relative to the 2.9 million refugees in countries immediately surrounding Syria, these numbers are small. In fact, they're minuscule. They represent only four percent of Syrian refugees," said Fleming.
"Just to put that into perspective, Europe has a population of 670 million people. Contrast that to Lebanon, which has a population of 4.4 million people and has received 1.1 million refugees," she added.
There are also huge numbers in Turkey, Jordan and conflict-torn Iraq.
"Neighbouring countries have reached a saturation point," said Fleming.
- Pushbacks -
She underlined that there had been positive steps in Europe, including a de facto moratorium imposed by most countries on returning refugees to Syria.
But she pointed to "disturbing gaps and practices" including "pushbacks" at land and sea borders by EU members Bulgaria, Cyprus, Greece and Spain, as well as by Albania, Montenegro, Russia, Serbia and Ukraine.
She also criticised slow access to asylum procedures which has left refugees waiting for months in deplorable conditions in over-burdened reception centres.
Under a regional treaty, governments can send refugees back to the European country where they first arrived, but front-line nations such as Italy have pleaded for more help.
The rules are in the spotlight after Swiss media reported that a France-bound Syrian women who was seven months pregnant had a miscarriage after being sent back to Italy by French and Swiss authorities.
Switzerland's border guard service said Friday that it had asked prosecutors to probe the case.
"We call on countries to welcome Syrians at their borders, to look into their circumstances inside their territory and in a case where someone is in a critical medical state, to offer them immediate treatment," said Fleming.
She also raised the alarm about anti-refugee rhetoric.
"We're seeing in some tabloids and newspapers awful and distorted headlines claiming that floods of Syrians are about to arrive in their country. Actually, when you look at these numbers, it really is a small, small percentage," she said.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Comments (0)
New comment: