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Reuters/AFP
Geneva
More than 1mn refugees and migrants came to the European Union this year, while almost 3,700 died or went missing in perilous journeys which reaped huge profit for smugglers, the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said yesterday.
“This is three to four times as many migrants and refugees coming north as we had in 2014, and the deaths have already far surpassed the deaths last year,” IOM chief William Lacy Swing told Reuters.
Almost all those arriving came across the Mediterranean or the Aegean Seas, and half were Syrians fleeing the war.
Another 20% were Afghans, and 7% were Iraqis, the IOM and the UN refugee agency UNHCR said in a joint statement.
People smuggling operations probably accounted for the majority of journeys and likely earned at least $1bn, Swing said, taking “anywhere from $2,000 to maybe $6,000 depending on how many members of the family and depending on which smuggling ring it is”.
The IOM estimates people smugglers in Europe have made $10bn or more since 2000, maybe much more.
“They are certainly getting very well paid for their services,” Swing said.
Out of a total of 1,005,504 arrivals to Greece, Bulgaria, Italy, Spain, Malta and Cyprus by December 21, the vast majority – 816,752 – arrived by sea in Greece, the IOM said.
At certain points over the last 12 months upwards of 5,000 people were landing in the Greek islands each day.
But the rate of arrivals in Greece has eased slightly since November, partly due to increased maritime patrols by Turkey and partly because of colder weather.
IOM spokesman Joel Millman said it was impossible to forecast how the flow of migrants would evolve in 2016.
“So much is in the balance, the resolution of the Syrian war, and the disposition of the European border protection moves that are being contemplated,” he said. “We never thought it would reach this level. We just hope people are treated with dignity.”
The record movement of people into Europe is a symptom of a record level of disruption around the globe, with numbers of refugees and internally displaced people far surpassing 60mn, the UNHCR said last week.
Swing said the war in Syria was only one among many causes, including Ebola and Boko Haram in West Africa, an earthquake in Nepal, conflicts in Libya, Yemen, South Sudan, Central African Republic and Afghanistan and Iraq.
“No wonder you have such a large flux coming north. This is an unprecedented scale of simultaneous complex protracted disasters from the western bulge of Africa to the Himalayas, with very few stable, peaceful spots in between.”
UN refugee chief Antonio Guterres called on Friday for a “massive resettlement” of Syrian and other refugees within Europe, to distribute many hundreds of thousands of people before the continent’s asylum system crumbles.
“We know Syrians will go on trying to reach Europe until there is a fundamental change in the factors that are pushing them to leave,” Guterres told the UN security council on Monday.
Guterres said there was need for a “New Deal” between the international community, especially Europe, and Syria’s neighbours who have borne the brunt of the refugee influx caused by the civil war.
Reflecting on the last 12 months, the UNHCR criticised the “initial chaotic reaction” in parts of Europe to the flood of migrants, but applauded signs that a more co-ordinated response was now emerging.
But a unified EU positon remains elusive, with Hungary and Slovakia having made threats of legal action against the bloc’s controversial plan to distribute 160,000 refugees across member states.
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