FP: In April, a 66-foot boat carrying some 850 migrants across the Mediterranean Sea to Italy capsized, killing almost all those on board. The tragedy catapulted migration issues to the forefront of Brussels’s political agenda, as ministers grappled with how to deal with Europe’s influx of asylum-seekers and migrants without documentation.
The crisis, of course, had been simmering long before April. According to the Geneva-based International Organization for Migration (IOM), some 3,200 people died trying to cross the Mediterranean in 2014. (The number was nearly 2,000 for just the first half of 2015.) And globally, the number of people displaced by conflict, persecution, or human rights violations topped 59.5 million at the end of 2014, according to a report by the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees—numbers not seen in decades.
The European Union’s proximity to protracted conflicts in the Middle East and Africa, as well as economically depressed areas in Eastern Europe, has made member countries—particularly Germany, Hungary, France, Italy, and Sweden—top destinations for asylum-seekers. In the first four months of 2015, EU member states received 242,075 first-time asylum applications, an 80 percent increase from the same period in 2014. (First-time applications, represented throughout the graphs to the right, offer the best trend measure, due to the high likelihood of repeat claims within a year or even a month.) Hungary, which people typically reach by way of Turkey or the Balkan states, saw the largest increase in applications, with nearly 13 times as many. And given the well-publicized dangers of traversing the Mediterranean, the EU shouldn’t be surprised that this land route is growing congested: In the first six months of 2015, IOM data showed 61,000 asylum-seekers and undocumented migrants there, already surpassing tallies for the whole of 2014.
Categories: Awareness, Behaviour, Double Standard, Europe and Australia, Treachery