Archive for the ‘Migrant Crisis’ Category

Greece Receives Disproportionate Number of EU Migrant …

Greece shouldered a disproportionate burden of the E.U.s asylumasylum applications last year, taking 8.5 percent of the blocs total requests, the Greek Asylum Service said Friday.

The country of 11 million people recorded 58,661 applications in 2017, putting Greece in first place among the EU member states when it comes to the proportion of asylum seekers to the inhabitants of the country, the service said in a statement.

Nearly half of Greeces 2017 asylum requests were received on five hotspot Aegean islands, the service added.

The Aegean Sea had been the main point of entry to Europe but the flow of migrants has been sharply cut after the E.U. signed a controversial deal with Turkey in 2016 to send back migrants.

The agreement included measures to limit the number of migrants processed by Greece, however of the 25,814 applications received on the Aegean islands last year, 20,377 were ruled eligible to be moved to the mainland, with 5,437 rejected.

The greatest number of Greeces applicants came from Syria, with 16,396, followed by Pakistan with 8,923, Iraq with 7,924 and Afghanistan with 7,567.

In 2015 the E.U., facing one of Europes worst migrant crisis since World War II, pushed through temporary refugee sharing quotas to ease the burden on frontline states like Greece, however several member states particularly in eastern Europe oppose the plan.

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Greece Receives Disproportionate Number of EU Migrant ...

Fleeing to Europe the migrant crisis | MSNBC

Moises Saman shot the central path of the modern migrant crisis, a sea route to Greece and a land scramble to potential salvation in the north.

This project is in partnership with Magnum Photos

Desperate migrants used to leave Europe by the thousands, fleeing war, poverty and persecution. Many flocked to America, where editorial cartoonists drew them as animals and politicians tried to keep them out. But if Europe used to populate the world, the world is now populating Europeand a new era of exclusion is just getting started.

The numbers compare to the largest migrations of the 20th century. More than one million people pressed into Europe in 2015, a four-fold increase over the year before, which itself was a new millennium high.

Most came through the Greek islands, where there are no signs of a slowdown. By the end of February 2016, 75,000 more people had arrived, a sum 25 times greater than the figure for the same period last year, and a worrying sign ahead more favorable spring weather.

The result, especially on the Greek island of Lesbos, is a kind of Ellis Island for the 21st century. Its a crash zone for tomorrows grandmothers and grandfathers, the future subjects of elementary school family tree projects.

Instead of descending from the decks of steamships, however, they step off rubber dinghies. Instead of ducking dictators and kings, they run from terrorists and warlords.

They turn away from ISIS in Iraq, civil war in Syria, and religious violence throughout the Middle East and North Africa. What they face in exchange is a wall of public anxiety, virulent populism and the threat of closed borders for thousands of miles.

That is, if they make it at all.

More than 3,500 migrants died trying to cross the Mediterranean Sea in 2015. Hundreds more perished in the first weeks of this year.

This is a new problem for Europe.

After the Second World War, Winston Churchill dreamed of a kind of united states, a place whose moral conception will win the respect and gratitude of mankind and whose physical strength will be such than none dare molest her tranquil sway.

Postwar Europe would be a welcoming place, he argued, where men and women of every country will think of being European as belonging to their native land, and wherever they go in this wide domain will truly feel here I am at home.

The eventual result: the Schengen Agreement, a three-decade-old arrangement that allows a person to travel 26 countries without showing his or her passport. This ease of movement, in addition to wealth and promise, is what lures migrants to Europe.

Its also what makes many native Europeans nervous. Churchills Europe was overwhelmingly white and Christian. Terrorism was little-known, and the Muslim population was virtually zero.

Todays Europe has changed, and so has its security, fueling a climate of fear thats focused on Islam.

The Muslim population on the continent is more than 15 million, including nearly 5 million in France and Germany, 3 million in the United Kingdom, 2 million in Italy and about a million in the Netherlands.

Those figures, compiled by the Pew Research Center, dont even include the latest wave of migration dominated by Syrians, Afghans, Iraqis, Moroccans and people from other countries in North Africa, the majority of them Muslim. Like the Europeans who fled for America in the early and mid-20th century, these immigrants are a mix of asylum-seekers and financial-dreamers. Many (perhaps most) are running from war and conflict. Others are seeking jobs and better lives.

What they have in common is bad timing and political misfortune.

On March 11, 2004, during the morning rush hour in Madrid, 10 bombs destroyed four commuter trains, killing 200 people and wounding a thousand. It was the deadliest terror attack in Europe since Churchills beautiful vision of a borderless continent. It was also the first in a string of attacks by Muslim assailants, many of them immigrants or the children of immigrants.

The next came in London in 2005. Four suicide bombers detonated rucksacks, killing 52 people and injuring hundreds more. It was the single worst terror attack on British soil.

In 2015, Paris suffered the worst one-two terror punch in its history: a massacre at the offices of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo last January, followed by a mid-November eruption of suicide bombings, spree shootings, and gory executions. More than 140 people died.

As a result, Europes tranquil sway has become a turbulent clash, pitting the biggest refugee crisis since World War II against perhaps the fiercest populism in a generation or more. Germany alone tells the story. Last year, the country counted more than a million new arrivals, including a large number from the Balkans in addition to the Mediterranean routes through Greece and Italy.

We can do it! became the mantra of Chancellor Angela Merkel. Polls showed that a majority of Germans agreed. While other countries put up fences and tightened border checks in defiance of the Schengen ideal, Germany seemed to revel in its fresh reputation for openness and acceptance.

But on New Years Eve, police described gangs of predators with a North African or Arabic appearance, groping, robbing and even raping the women of Cologne, Germany. When at least 21 of the alleged assailants were identified as asylum-seekers, a switch in Germany seemed to flip.

An anti-Islamization demonstration vandalized downtown Leipzig. Der Spiegel criticized Merkel for overseeing an era of crime and chaos. In the reconsidered opinion of most Germans, meanwhile, the country had too many migrants, according to a poll published by the German daily Bild. Back in September, the numbers were nearly reversed.

Finally, Merkel herself changed her tone. She pledged a crackdown on criminal asylum seekers.

Europe at large is even tougher. At every recent meeting of the European Union, the migrant crisis has dominated discussion, with most leaders still resisting a mandatory plan to share 160,000 refugees across the continent. Many months after the plan was announced, fewer than 500 people had been placed in new homes. Thats about 10 percent of the daily flow into Greece.

Pope Francis tried to intervene in January. He acknowledged the inevitable difficulties of absorbing new people but held out hope that Europes humanistic spirit would prevail. For now, Europes elected leaders respectfully disagree.

We have forgotten, French prime minster Manuel Valls recently told reporters, that history is fundamentally tragic.

MOISES SAMAN was born in Lima, Peru, from a mixed Spanish and Peruvian family, and he grew up in Spain. He is a regular contributor to The New York Times, Human Rights Watch, Newsweek, and Time, among other international publications. He has been honored with multiple awards and is the recipient of a 2015 Guggenheim Fellowship. As a photojournalist, I am interested in searching for the positive commonalities in human spirit, to expose those intimate moments among people that remind us of dignity and hope in the face of conflict. His forthcoming book, Discordia, a personal memory of the nearly four years he spent living and working as a photojournalist in the Middle East during the Arab Spring from 2011 to 2014, was published in March 2016. Saman became a full member of Magnum in 2014. He now lives in Spain.

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Fleeing to Europe the migrant crisis | MSNBC

How Strive Masiyiwa is trying to stem the migrant crisis …

Around 71,000 migrants made it to Europe by sea just five months into 2017, a UN Migration Agency report said.

The migrants all have one thing in common: they search for greener pastures elsewhere when home holds no hope.

Masiyiwa, the founder and CEO of Econet Wireless, a pan-African telecoms company, is putting his money where his mouth is by traveling across the continent in a series of townhalls where he directly connects and engages with young people.

At one townhall held in Lagos, Nigeria in September, Masiyiwa was so taken with one young entrepreneur's business idea that he donated $100,000.

"I believe sharing ideas with each other is so important to the future of the African continent," Masiyiwa -- who is worth an estimated $280m -- says.

By teaching young Africans to be self-reliant and proactive, the telecoms tycoon is encouraging them to stay in their countries and contribute to the development of the continent.

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How Strive Masiyiwa is trying to stem the migrant crisis ...

Migrant crisis: Boat sinks off Libya, killing at least 31 …

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At least 31 migrants have died after their boat capsized off the coast of Libya on Saturday.

They had been trying to cross the Mediterranean along with another boat. Children were among the dead.

Some 60 people were rescued from the water and 140 picked up from the second boat.

Mild weather conditions and calm seas has led to a rise in the number of migrants leaving Libya for Europe in recent days.

Some 250 people were rescued by the Libyan coastguard on Thursday.

And Italy's coastguard said on Tuesday it had rescued 1,100 people.

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Saturday's sinking happened off the shores of Garabulli, a town some 37 miles (60 km) east of the Libyan capital, Tripoli.

"The first dinghy had capsized, it had sunk before we reached it," Colonel Abu Ajala Abdelbari of Libya's coastguard said.

He said the coastguard had gone to the scene "after hearing distress signals, and when they got there they found a group of people hanging on to the remainder of the dinghy, but the rest had died, they had spread out while the dinghy was sinking."

They have been taken taken to Tripoli's naval base.

Other rescue operations were ongoing on Saturday evening, an Italian coastguard told the AFP news agency.

"The weather conditions these days are favourable for sending migrants to European shores on boats that are often unseaworthy," Colonel Abu Ajala Abdelbari said.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) said on Friday that at least 33,000 people are reported to have died or gone missing between 2000 and 2017 - making crossing the Mediterranean the world's "deadliest journey" for migrants.

Nearly 3,000 migrants are believed to have drowned while trying to cross the Mediterranean this year.

A note on terminology: The BBC uses the term migrant to refer to all people on the move who have yet to complete the legal process of claiming asylum. This group includes people fleeing war-torn countries such as Syria, who are likely to be granted refugee status, as well as people who are seeking jobs and better lives, who governments are likely to rule are economic migrants.

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Migrant crisis: Boat sinks off Libya, killing at least 31 ...

Migrant crisis: Facebook publishes torture used to extort ransom – The Times

Special investigation | video

Traffickers use videos to get cash from families

Catherine Philp, DiplomaticCorrespondent| BillyKenber,InvestigationsReporter

People smugglers and slave trading gangs are using Facebook to broadcast the abuse and torture of migrants to extort ransom money from their families.

Footage that has remained on the social media site for months shows Libyan gangmasters threatening the lives of migrants who have fled their homelands, often in the hope of reaching Europe.

The United Nations migration agency condemned the technology giant and publisher as irresponsible for allowing it to be used by smugglers to advertise their services, entice vulnerable people on the move and then exploit them and their families.

The disclosure is part of a series of reports by The Times on the migrant crisis affecting hundreds of thousands of people on either side of the Mediterranean. Today the exploitation of

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Migrant crisis: Facebook publishes torture used to extort ransom - The Times