Archive for the ‘Migrant Crisis’ Category

Migrant Crisis – SMH.com.au

This graphic shows the ratio of our refugee population to our wealth in 2014 a year when the number of newly displaced hit a record high.

The West has historically thrown a lot of money at the problem of refugees. Problem is: it doesn't work.

One in five of the world's displaced come from Syria. Nearly two million have ended up in Turkey, like 10-year-old Afaf and baby Sufian.

At The Jungle in Calais, France, thousands of people seeking a new life stand in rags on the threshold of Britain. Daniel is one of them.

Around the world, 38 million are displaced within their own countries - they could be the refugees of tomorrow. From North Korea, Pak Sol-hwa risked everything to cross into China.

A record 34,000 unaccompanied minors applied for asylum in 82 countries last year. Six-year-old Daniel made the journey to the US with two other children to escape a life of crime.

Australia resettled 11,600 people in 2014. But in our neighbourhood, thousands of genuine refugees remain in limbo. Khadim Dai is one.

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Migrant Crisis - SMH.com.au

These refugees escaped war. Now they’re freezing in Greece’s … – Washington Post

By Annabell Van den Berghe By Annabell Van den Berghe January 28

BRUSSELS With a cold snap bringing snow and freezing temperatures to Greeces overcrowded refugee camps, a new type of migrant crisis is overwhelming tens of thousands of people who fled war and poverty in the hopes of a better life in Europe.

The chilly weather this month has already cost the lives of several asylum seekers in the Balkans, as tents and other lightweight shelter that are adequate to Greek islands balmy summers have proven inadequate for winter gusts. Heavy snowfall on the islands has piled up on tents, and freezing temperatures have been recorded even on islands that usually have temperate winter weather.

The poor conditions in Greece have highlighted Europes ongoing challenge to address the migration crisis, even during winter months in which fresh arrivals have slowed to a trickle because of a forbidding sea crossing. Although the camps have drawn condemnation from the United Nations and senior E.U. leaders, the European Union has left the cash-strapped Greek government to handle the challenge mostly on its own.

With so many children and vulnerable people remaining in filthy camping tents, the need is great for Europe to show solidarity and take responsibility, said Roland Schnbauer, an Athens-based spokesman for the U.N. refugee agency. He added that refugees have been wandering through overcrowded camps to keep warm.

[Number of stranded refugees in Greece could rise under latest E.U. plan]

At the Pikpa refugee camp on the Greek island of Lesbos, temperatures in recent days have dropped to the low twenties.

The camp is better than anything weve seen before, said Najwa Hassan, who escaped the Islamic State takeover of Mosul and has been living in the camp since July. But its difficult to keep them warm, they cant move, she said, referring to her children.

Hassan said two of her three children lost their ability to walk after the Islamic State threw them off the roof in Mosul. Her husband was beheaded in front of their children; Islamic State militants subsequently beat her up.

Her 15-year-old son, Ahmed, sleeps from dawn to dusk, covered under too few blankets to keep him warm. The scarce moments hes awake are filled with screaming, Hassan said.

I dont know if hes in pain, or if hes afraid or maybe only cold, she said. She said they have not had access to a doctor. At least 15percent of the population in the refugee camps faces a disability or trauma, according to an estimate from Human Rights Watch, an advocacy organization.

With all of the camps heavily overcrowded, often reaching three times their capacity, aid workers find themselves trying to help with steeply curtailed resources. Some refugees have been forced to take matters into their own hands, burning anything they can find to heat their tents, according to Loic Jaeger, the head of the Greek mission of Doctors Without Borders, which works in the refugee camps.

Weve been donating winter clothes, socks and blankets, but what we really need is appropriate shelter, which is something only the authorities can decide on, Jaeger said.

In recent days, Greek authorities have offered a temporary solution by converting a tank landing ship into a dorm for some male asylum seekers.

[Over 7,100 migrant deaths in 2016 is a world record. More than half were in the Mediterranean.]

European officials have also condemned the conditions and implored other E.U. nations to step up their aid efforts.

We all Greeks, Europeans have a humanitarian imperative to alleviate the situation here on the islands, said Dimitris Avramopoulos, the European commissioner charged with migration issues, during a recent visit to Lesbos.

But Greece has been told to cope using its own resources, and a system that would send some asylum seekers back to Turkey to ease pressure on the camps has largely stalled. About 50,000 refugees and migrant are in Greece, according to U.N. refugee agency figures.

The paralysis has frustrated refugee advocates.

The situation today is the result of eight months not doing enough, said Jaeger, of Doctors Without Borders. We all knew that winter would come.

Michael Birnbaum contributed to this article.

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A shipwreck off Libya raises the already horrific death toll for migrants in the Mediterranean

Migrants get stuck in Greece as door closes to Europe

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These refugees escaped war. Now they're freezing in Greece's ... - Washington Post

Hungary tells EU to stop being NAIVE over migrant crisis as it insists it NEEDS fence – Express.co.uk

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Government spokesman Zoltn Kovcs insisted the border fences were the only way to police the escalating migrant crisis, despite admitting it is not nice.

Mr Kovcs was also quick to take a swipe at Brussels, saying they were being naive over asylum seekers who use the Mediterranean as a free ride to misuse the system and basically disappear when they arrive in the promised land of Europe.

He called on Italy to do more to stem the flow of migrants.

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A Migrant is helped to wash tear gas from his eyes after clashes with Hungarian police at the Horgos border

The fence is not nice. But it is the only way to close the natural borders of a country

Zoltn Kovcs, Government spokesman

But despite the criticism, he said Hungary remained committed to the bloc, adding: Our criticism, even if its criticism, it is for the sake of Europe.

Ever since the migrant crisis erupted, with more than one million refugees pouring into Europe, Hungary has taken a robust stance on defending its borders.

The country was on a direct Balkans route used by migrants to make their way from Greece and into Serbia and Croatia.

In response, tough-talking Prime Minister Viktor Orban insisted enough was enough and ordered his borders with Serbia and Croatia to be shut.

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Mr Kovcs said: The fence is not nice. But it is the only way to close the natural borders of a country.

During a visit to Brussels, Mr Kovcs also issued a warning shot to Britain telling them they cannot cherry pick EU benefits during Brexit negotiations.

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When asked whether Hungary would support European Council President Donald Tusk for a second term, Mr Kovcs remained tight-lipped saying it was too early to call.

Hungary recently recruited secondary school students to become border huntersin order to protect the nations porous borders.

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Hungary tells EU to stop being NAIVE over migrant crisis as it insists it NEEDS fence - Express.co.uk

‘Migrant Crisis’ Cost Germany over 20 Billion in 2016 – Breitbart – Breitbart News

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The official figures, published Friday, show that 9.3 billion went to help states and municipalities cope with funding the living cost of the influx of more than a million people who arrived since 2015.

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Other outlays by the federal government relating to the migrant wave include 7.1 billion spent on foreign aid, 1.4 billion on migrants reception, registration, and accommodation, and 2.1 billion on integration services.

Despite the significant expenseon migrants, the Frankfurter Allgemeiner Zeitung notes that the federal government managed to maintain a budget surplus for the third year in a row.

In addition, the head of the German Institute for Economic Research told the newspaper that the economy benefits from the influx of people from the third world, more than two thirds of whom cannot read or write.

Ferdinand Fichtner described the 20 billion outlay as a huge stimulus package and said that money spent on migrants food along with their accommodation costs will have flowed into the German economy. This applies to 90 per cent of the expenditure, he stated.

This latest data, which details just the amount spent by the federal government, only really scratches the surface with regards to revealing the true cost of Chancellor Angela Merkels unpopular decision to open Germanys borders.

The 9.3 billion package in the federal governments outlay last year provided financial help to state and municipal governments but far from covered the costs. Local governments said in May that they expect to have to shoulder around 21 billion a year, rising to 30 billion by 2020, on migrants cost of living.

In August last year, it was revealed that, beyond integration, the migrant crisis will significantly raise the countrys security bill. Sources reported that the estimated minimum requirement of 20,000 new police officers will cost taxpayers at least 1.3 billion per year, a figure which is expected to have an upward trend.

Bild reported that Germanys budget for internal security is set to climb until 2017 by at least a third, from 6.1 billion to 8.3 billion.

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'Migrant Crisis' Cost Germany over 20 Billion in 2016 - Breitbart - Breitbart News

Refugee Children Face Beatings and Subzero Temperatures as They Are Pushed Back Into Serbia – TIME

More than 1500 people are living in bleak conditions in one of the warehouses near the train station, Jan. 17, 2017 in Belgrade, Serbia.AwakeningBarcroft Media/Getty Images

Authorities in Croatia and Hungary are illegally pushing refugee and migrant children back into Serbia, often violently, Save the Children alleged Tuesday.

The group estimated that 1,600 such cases 30 incidents per day have taken place in the past two months. Children, some as young as 8 years old, have reported beatings by police and smugglers, dog bites and sleeping outside in subzero weather.

Serbia isn't a European Union member state but has become a focal point of the European migrant crisis, since an E.U.-Turkey deal last year aimed at restricting the arrival of migrants by boat, forced many to take a more dangerous route overland through the Balkans. Migrants have been making their way north through Serbia in order to reach E.U. bloc members Hungary and Croatia in the hopes of moving farther west into Europe.

Save the Children said that as many as 100 refugees and migrants are arriving in Serbia every day, and in the capital, Belgrade, more than 1,000 people are sleeping rough in a warehouse near the train station in temperatures as low as 5F (15C). Around 46% of the new arrivals in Serbia are children, the charity said, and among those, up to one-fifth are making the journey to Europe unaccompanied.

Read More: Their Families Fled Syria. They Were Born Refugees. What Comes Next?

In truth the refugee crisis has not abated. Its simply a more dangerous route, especially for children," said Jelena Besedic, Save the Childrens advocacy manager in Serbia. "The E.U.-Turkey deal has given smugglers a firmer grip on a hugely profitable business, incorporating increasingly dangerous tactics to circumvent authorities."

While Serbia has provided official asylum centers, Save the Children said that many migrants are fearful of detention or deportation. Sleeping rough, many migrants are vulnerable to people smugglers, and health services have reported cases of frostbite and respiratory illnesses caused by people burning trash to keep warm.

Mdecins Sans Frontires warned that the city "risks becoming a dumping zone, a new Calais where people are stranded and stuck,"according to the Guardian.

Save the Children is calling on the E.U. and Serbian authorities to direct more resources, including funding and emergency shelters, to help those on the migrant route.

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Refugee Children Face Beatings and Subzero Temperatures as They Are Pushed Back Into Serbia - TIME